Chen Der-hwa

Politician from Taiwan
Chen Der-hwa
陳德華
Political Deputy Minister of Education of the Republic of China
In office
30 July 2014 – 16 August 2014
MinisterWu Se-hwa
Administrative DeputyLin Shu-chen
Succeeded byLucia Lin[1]
Minister of Education of the Republic of China
(acting)
In office
14 July 2014 – 29 July 2014
Political DeputyHuang Pi-twan
Administrative DeputyLin Shu-chen
Preceded byChiang Wei-ling
Succeeded byWu Se-hwa
Political Deputy Minister of Education of the Republic of China
In office
22 October 2013[2] – 14 July 2014
MinisterChiang Wei-ling
Administrative DeputyLin Shu-chen
Preceded byChen I-hsing
Administrative Deputy Minister of Education of the Republic of China
In office
June 2012 – 22 October 2013
MinisterChiang Wei-ling
Political DeputyHuang Pi-twan, Chen I-hsing
Succeeded byLin Shu-chen[3]
Personal details
NationalityRepublic of China
Alma materNational Taiwan Normal University
National Chengchi University

Chen Der-hwa (traditional Chinese: 陳德華; simplified Chinese: 陈德华; pinyin: Chén Déhuá) is a Taiwanese politician. He was the Political Deputy Minister of Education from 22 October 2013 until 16 August 2014 with a brief stint as Minister of Education on 14–29 July 2014 after Chiang Wei-ling resigned due to alleged academic fraud.[4] His appointment to Political Deputy Minister had also come in the wake of the sudden resignation of another predecessor, Chen I-hsing.[2] He had been the Administrative Deputy Minister from June 2012 until October 2013.[5]

Education

Chen obtained his bachelor's and master's degrees in 1983 and 1987, respectively, from National Taiwan Normal University. He then obtained his doctoral's degree from National Chengchi University in education in 2000.

Early career

Chen started his career in 1988 at the Ministry of Education by becoming the Section Chief of the Department of Higher Education in July 1988 until January 1994. He then became the Senior Specialist of the Council of Academic Reviewal and Evaluation in January 1994 until December 1997. Afterwards, he became the Deputy Director of the Department of Higher Education in December 1997 until May 2000. In May-October 2000, he became the Senior Inspector of the Inspector Office. In October 2000 until September 2002, he became the Director-General of the Department of Technological and Vocational Education. He then became the Senior Inspector and Executive Secretary of the Educational Research Committee in September 2002 until May 2004. Afterwards, he became the Director-General of the Department of Higher Education in May 2004 until March 2007. Finally he became the Counselor of Counselors Office in March 2007 until June 2012.[6]

References

  1. ^ "MAC official resigns two jobs for 'family reasons' - Taipei Times". taipeitimes.com. 17 August 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
  2. ^ a b "Kuomintang News Network". Kmt.org.tw. 2013-10-23. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
  3. ^ "New deputy ministers of defense, education, indigenous affairs named(行政院全球資訊網 - PDA(英文版)-Press Releases)". Ey.gov.tw. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
  4. ^ "Premier accepts minister's resignation over academic scandal | Politics | FOCUS TAIWAN - CNA ENGLISH NEWS". focustaiwan.tw. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
  5. ^ "Minister and Deputy Ministers : Administrative Deputy Minister : Chen, Der-hwa Ph. D." English.moe.gov.tw. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  6. ^ "Ministry of Education Republic of China (Taiwan)". 25 December 2019.
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Ministers of Education of the Republic of China
Provisional Government in Nanjing
(1912)Beiyang government
(1912-1928)
  1. Cai Yuanpei
  2. Fan Yuanlian
  3. Liu Guanxiong
  4. Chen Zhenxian
  5. Dong Hongwei
  6. Wang Daxie
  7. Yan Xiu
  8. Cai Rukai (acting)
  9. Tang Hualong
  10. Zhang Zongxiang (acting)
  11. Zhang Yilin
  12. Zhang Guogan
  13. Sun Hongyi
  14. Fan Yuanlian
  15. Yuan Xitao (acting)
  16. Fu Zengxiang
  17. Yuan Xitao
  18. Fu Yuefen
  19. Fan Yuanlian
  20. Ma Linyi (acting)
  21. Huang Yanpei
  22. Qi Yaoshan (acting)
  23. Qi Yaoshan
  24. Zhou Ziqi
  25. Huang Yanpei
  26. Gao Enhong (acting)
  27. Wang Chonghui
  28. Tang Erhe
  29. Peng Yunyi
  30. Huang Guo
  31. Fan Yuanlian
  32. Zhang Guogan
  33. Huang Guo
  34. Yi Peiji
  35. Wang Jiuling
  36. Ma Xulun (acting)
  37. Zhang Shizhao
  38. Yi Peiji
  39. Ma Junwu
  40. Hu Renyuan
  41. Huang Guo
  42. Ren Kecheng
  43. Liu Zhe
National Government in Guangzhou
(1926)
  1. Chen Gongbo/Gan Naiguang/Xu Chongzhi/Jin Zengcheng/Zhong Rongguang/Chu Minyi
National Government in Wuhan
(1927)Nanjing Nationalist government
(1927-1949)
  1. Cai Yuanpei/Li Yuying/Wang Zhaoming/Xu Chongqing/Jin Zengcheng/Chu Minyi/Zhong Rongguang/Zhang Naiyan/Wei Que
  2. Cai Yuanpei
  3. Jiang Menglin
  4. Gao Lu
  5. Chiang Kai-shek
  6. Li Shuhua
  7. Zhu Jiahua
  8. Duan Xipeng
  9. Weng Wenhao
  10. Zhu Jiahua
  11. Wang Shijie
  12. Chen Lifu
  13. Zhu Jiahua
  14. Mei Yiqi
  15. Chen Hsueh-ping
  16. Han Lih-wu
  17. Chen Hsueh-ping (acting)
Government of the Republic of China
(1949-present)


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