為達最佳瀏覽效果,建議使用 Chrome、Firefox 或 Microsoft Edge 的瀏覽器。

請至Edge官網下載 請至FireFox官網下載 請至Google官網下載
晴時多雲

限制級
您即將進入之新聞內容 需滿18歲 方可瀏覽。
根據「電腦網路內容分級處理辦法」修正條文第六條第三款規定,已於網站首頁或各該限制級網頁,依台灣網站分級推廣基金會規定作標示。 台灣網站分級推廣基金會(TICRF)網站:http://www.ticrf.org.tw

《TAIPEI TIMES 焦點》 School honors TSMC’s Chang

A National Taiwan University graduate has a message written on her graduation cap at the school’s graduation ceremony yesterday.
Photo: CNA

A National Taiwan University graduate has a message written on her graduation cap at the school’s graduation ceremony yesterday. Photo: CNA

2015/06/14 03:00

DEGREES OF SUCCESS: The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co chairman led a survey on top bosses and urged new graduates to pursue lifelong learning

By Chen Chien-chih / Staff reporter

Telling graduates that their character would determine their fate, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) chairman Morris Chang (張忠謀) yesterday urged them to pursue lifelong learning and the “cultivated qualities” of honesty and caring.

Chang made the remarks in a speech in Taichung at the commencement ceremony of Asia University, which conferred an honorary doctorate of engineering on him, citing his contribution to the nation’s semiconductor manufacturing industry.

Chang said that he was 22 years old and “penniless” when he earned his master’s degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

However, he saw himself as a man of integrity who cared about society and who had cultivated his honesty and patriotism, he said.

Those qualities have had a positive lifelong impact on him and his career, Chang said, encouraging the graduates to nurture the qualities and to be incorruptible by resisting society’s temptations.

Chang decided — impulsively — to get a job after he was denied an opportunity to take part in a doctoral program, he said.

The missed opportunity changed his views on learning, which he had considered just as a means to earn a degree, and motivated him to explore subjects that aided his career as well as those he found intriguing.

It led him to study even harder after work than when he was a student, he said, and urged the audience to pursue lifelong learning in a disciplined, systemic and organized manner.

It is necessary for people to strike a balance between time spent on work, pleasure and family life, as well as on learning, hobbies and rest, Chang said.

The best way to use the 168 hours in a week is to spend no more than 50 hours working and from 20 to 30 hours with family and friends and on your hobbies, Chang said.

Spend 10 to 20 hours learning and seven or eight hours exercising, while using what is left for rest, he said.

He added that the key of life is happiness that comes from a sense of accomplishment and gratification, not from fortune and fame.

In related news, according to a survey released by the online job bank yes123, Chang has been voted the ideal supervisor by college graduates, taking the title two years in a row.

He beat second-ranked Eslite Group chairman Robert Wu (吳清友) and Wowprime Corp’s (王品集團) Steve Day (戴勝益), whose ranking fell from second last year to fifth after his firm became embroiled in a host of food safety scandals.

Chang was the winner of the Global Exemplary Leadership Award by the Global Semiconductor Alliance in 1999 and was named “Businessperson of the Year” by Forbes Asia in 2012.(Additional reporting by Huang Pang-ping)

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co chairman Morris Chang addresses graduates and their guests at Asia University in Taichung yesterday after having been awarded an honorary doctorate by the school.
Photo provided by Asia University

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co chairman Morris Chang addresses graduates and their guests at Asia University in Taichung yesterday after having been awarded an honorary doctorate by the school. Photo provided by Asia University

不用抽 不用搶 現在用APP看新聞 保證天天中獎  點我下載APP  按我看活動辦法

焦點今日熱門

2024巴黎奧運

挺選手拚好運

看更多!請加入自由時報粉絲團

網友回應

載入中
此網頁已閒置超過5分鐘,請點擊透明黑底或右下角 X 鈕。