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Education in Vietnam is a state-run system of public and private education run by the Ministry of Education and Training. It is divided into five levels: preschool, primary school, secondary school, high school, and higher education. Formal education consists of twelve years of basic education, including five years of primary education, four years of secondary education, and three years of high school education. The majority of basic education students are enrolled on a daily basis. The main goals are general knowledge improvement, human resource training, and talent development.
Vietnam has attempted to expand its education system. In 2012, estimated national budget for education was 6.3%. There have been comments from the public that schools should opt for a more flexible studying program, with less emphasis on tests and more focus on developing life skills. In response to public opinion, the Ministry of Education and Training implemented a number of education reforms. Tertiary enrollment rates were 3% in 1995 and then increased to around 30% by 2019.
Establishments
Regarding ownership, as prescribed in Article 44 of Vietnam's Education Law, there are four types of educational establishments:
- Public education establishments: established and monitored by the State. The State also nominates their administrators and decides staff quota. The State invests in infrastructure and allocates funding for their regular spending tasks.
- Semi-public educational establishments: set up by the State on the basis of mobilizing organizations and individuals in the society to jointly invest in infrastructure.
- People-founded educational establishments: Social or economic organizations apply for permission from the State to set up an institution with non-State budget capital.
- Private educational establishments: Individuals or groups of individuals apply for permission from the State to set up and invest in the institution by themselves.
The semi-public, people-founded and private educational establishments are referred collectively to as non-public educational establishments.
School grades
In Vietnam, a school year is divided into two semesters. For the 2025-2026 school year, the term dates are from 5 September to 18 January or earlier. Schools can start the school year up to one week early for grade 2-8 and grade 10-11, up to two weeks early for grade 1, 9 and 12. The second term begin from mid-January (specific date based on each school) to 31 May or earlier.
{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="border-collapse:collapse;"
|-
!Level/Grade !! Typical age
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | Preschool
|-
| Pre-school playgroup || 3-4
|-
| Kindergarten || 4-5
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | Primary school
|-
| First grade || 6-7
|-
| Second grade || 7-8
|-
| Third grade || 8-9
|-
| Fourth grade || 9-10
|-
| Fifth grade || 10-11
|-
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | Middle school (Junior high school)
|-
| Sixth grade || 11-12
|-
| Seventh grade|| 12-13
|-
| Eighth grade|| 13-14
|-
| Ninth grade|| 14-15
|-
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | High school
|-
| Tenth grade || 15-16
|-
| Eleventh grade || 16-17
|-
| Twelfth grade || 17-18
|-
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | Post-secondary education (Higher education)
|-
| Junior college || Ages vary (2–3 years)
|-
| University || Ages vary (usually 4 years)
|- style="background:silver;"
| colspan=2 | Postgraduate education
|-
| Master || Ages vary (usually 2 years)
|-
| Ph.D. || Ages vary (usually 4 years)
|}
Academic grading
Primary
thumb|upright=0.9|Primary students in [[Da Nang, Vietnam]]
Children normally start primary education (tiểu học) at the age of six. Education at this level lasts for 5 years and is compulsory for all children. The country's literacy rate is over 90%.
According to the Multiple Indicators Cluster Survey 2006 of Vietnam's General Statistics Office, 96% of six to 11-year-old children enrolled in primary school. There was still a disparity in the primary education completion rate among different ethnicity groups. While primary completion rate for Kinh students was 86%, the rate for ethnic minority children was 61%.
In the school year 2009–2010, Vietnam had 15,172 primary schools and 611 combined primary and lower secondary schools. The total enrollment was 7.02 million pupils, of whom 46% were girls.
The renovated primary education curriculum in Vietnam is divided into two phases as follows:
- Phase 1 includes Grades 1, 2 and 3 with 9 subjects: Vietnamese Language, Mathematics, Morality, Nature and Society, Arts, Physical Education, and (since 2020) Experience Activities, Information Technology and Foreign Language.
- Phase 2 includes Grades 4 and 5 with 12 subjects: Vietnamese Language, Information Technology, Mathematics, Morality, Science (Nature and Society), History, Geography, Basic Techniques, Music, Arts, Physical Education and (since 2023) Experience Activities and Foreign Language.
Graduation exam
The Ministry of Education and Training announced that for the 2017 graduation examination (), five papers would be included: Mathematics, Literature, Foreign language, Natural Sciences, and Social Sciences. Three papers are mandatory for all students: Mathematics, Literature (the only remaining essay-based exam paper which is the spiritual successor of 1075-1919 exams), and Foreign language. Foreign language exam can be one of the following: English, French, German, Chinese, Japanese, Russian or Korean (since 2021). Apart from three mandatory papers, student must complete a fourth paper by choosing either natural sciences (a combination of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology) or Social Sciences (a combination of History, Geography, and Civic Education). In some cases, before 2020, students can take both the Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and will choose the paper with the higher result to be evaluated.
University
thumb|right|[[Vietnam National University, Hanoi|upright=1.33]]
From 2002 to 2014, university entrance was based on the scores achieved in the Universities and Colleges Selection Examination (TSĐHCĐ). The TSĐHCĐ and the High School Graduation Examination (TNTHPT) were abolished in 2015 and replaced by a unified test, the National High School Examination (THPTQG). The THPTQG was stopped after 2019, and the TNTHPT resumed. Universities can use the results for admissions, or they can use new self-organized admission tests, such as Aptitude Test used by VNU, VNU-HCM, HNUE, HCMUE, and Vietnamese police academies, or Thinking Skills Assessment used by HUST.
The demand for student placements into universities outweighed the supply, where around 1.3 million students would choose to enroll into universities, only 600,000 could be supplied due to lack of teaching staff at the tertiary level or post-secondary level. This prompted calls for the government to help expand the tertiary sector, especially with increasing trend of enrolments into university from 1990 to 2019.
Types
Vietnamese Government decree (decree 43/2000/ND-CP, dated August 30, 2000) identified three types of higher education institutions:
- University system (), which is a multidisciplinary institution offering fields of study and which has research capacities. Six major university systems in Vietnam are Vietnam National University, Hanoi; Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City; Hue University; University of Da Nang; Thai Nguyen University; and Hanoi University of Science and Technology.
- University (or college; ), which is more narrowly focused in its curriculum, sometimes on a single study area.
- Academy (), which is also narrowly focused in terms of study area and which may have a specialized research capacity.
Qualifications
- Associate Degree (): a three-year program delivered by junior colleges (including teachers colleges and others) and/or by some universities as additional training programs.
- Bachelor's degree (): a four- to six-year program — six years for students studying medical and dental sciences; five years for students of industrial engineering; and four years for the majority of other undergraduate degrees such as Social Sciences. Graduates receive degrees with a title corresponding to their field of study such as bachelor (), engineer (), medical doctor (), or lawyer (), etc.
Teaching quality issues
Vietnamese diaspora have stated that the higher education system needs to update curricula, move away from a lecturer-centered method of teaching and learning, increase linkage between teaching and research activities, and match theory to practical training so that graduates can find jobs in an economy where skills shortages drive inflation to double-digit levels. Vietnamese students perceive themselves to lack knowledge despite being taught a lot due to an emphasis on achieving high test scores and a lack of real-life implementation. Center for Policy Studies and Analysis- University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vietnam National University, Hanoi surveyed 3000 respondents in 2009-2010 on graduate employment. 26.2% were unemployed; among those employed, 61% lacked sufficient working skill, 43% lacked experience, and 32% felt insecure in providing professional expertise.
Only primary schools are subsidized by the government, to 50% of the total tuition cost. Primary education quality, particularly in poor areas, is below the required standard. The drop-out rate after fifth grade is higher for those in rural and mountainous area since most students cannot afford to attend secondary school or university due to poverty. Participatory Poverty Assessments (PPAs) found that for some poor households, child labor is considered more valuable than school attendance in short-term economics. For poor families, the opportunity cost of sending their children to school is perceived to be high and the long-term benefit of education cannot outweigh the short-term economic losses.
National Foreign Languages 2020 Project
In 2008, the Vietnamese government officially approved the Foreign Language Teaching and Learning in the National Education System in the 2008-2020 Period plan through Decision No. 1400/QD-TTg. Among other things, it set the goal of seeing 100% of students enrolled in a 10-year foreign language education program by 2020. By 2017, the goal was out of reach so the program was extended to 2025 through Decision 2080/QD-TTg.
See also
- Vietnamese studies
