Hanoi (VNA)♒ – As global integration accelerates and pressure for reform mounts, universities in Ho Chi Minh City are repositioning themselves to churn out graduates who can compete in cutting-edge fields and meet the demands of a fast-changing global economy.
At the core of this shift is a push to internationalise education. Universities are chasing global accreditation to align their curricula with international benchmarks, ensuring graduates can hold their own worldwide. New courses in artificial intelligence (AI), semiconductor design, robotics, and interdisciplinary studies reflect a calculated pivot towards industries driving sustainable growth. At the forefront is the Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology under the Vietnam National University (VNU) - HCM City. For two decades, it has trained semiconductor engineers, embedding chip design in its electrical engineering courses. With global chip shortages exposing vulnerabilities in tech supply chains, the university is stepping up. For the 2024-25 academic year, it will launch an undergraduate major in integrated circuit design and a graduate major in semiconductors. These are strategic bets positioning Vietnam as a vital node in the global tech ecosystem. The University of Science, also under the VNU - HCM City, has carved out a niche in the AI and data science frontier. In 2021, it became one of Vietnam’s first to offer undergraduate AI training, followed by master's and doctoral programmes in 2022, covering machine learning, natural language processing, computer vision, and intelligent systems.

♈ Scientific research key to Vietnam’s high-quality human resource training
With increased investment in both human resources and infrastructure, particularly laboratories, research activities at universities have seen significant progress in recent years.
VNA