No elimination of compulsory inspection in higher education
The draft Law on Higher Education (amended) does not abolish mandatory inspection, but re-establish the scope of inspection based on the level of risk and public benefits, which is the answer of Mr. Huynh Van Chuong - Director of the Department of Quality Management (Ministry of Education and Training) when answering the press at the regular Government press conference in July. In addition to specific majors such as pedagogical, medical, and legal, the remaining majors will be classified according to the list prescribed by the Ministry of Education and Training, in order to suit international practice and practices.

The Ministry of Education and Training plans to apply artificial intelligence (AI) to the process of reviewing self-assessment reports and appraisal reports of schools. AI will support the detection of abnormalities, copying content, low report quality and help compare evidence with standard databases, giving early warnings before direct assessment.
A representative of the Ministry of Education and Training affirmed that AI does not replace humans but plays a role in supporting appraisal experts, helping the appraisal process to be more objective, transparent and cost-effective in the context of increasing number of training programs and appraisal organizations. See more...
Job opportunities for the Control and Automation Engineering industry
The Ministry of Education proposes a policy to attract the recruitment of preschool teachers
The Ministry of Education and Training proposes 4 groups of policies to popularize preschool education, emphasize the investment role of the State and mobilize social resources. The first policy focuses on developing a network of schools, teaching equipment and a team of teachers, ensuring adequate facilities to meet the learning needs of children aged 3 to 5.

The second policy prioritizes investment in developing preschool education in disadvantaged areas, ethnic minority areas, industrial parks, etc. The goal is that by 2030, 100% of public preschools in particularly disadvantaged communes will have enough solid classrooms and standard equipment. Children staying in these areas will be supported with school supplies and boarding costs.
The remaining two policies include supporting study costs and lunch for preschool children in difficult circumstances, especially children of workers; along with policies to attract teachers and preschool staff with recruitment subsidies and support for work in disadvantaged areas, contributing to improving the quality of human resources for preschool education. See more...
Graduation failure is not the end
According to statistics from the Ministry of Education and Training, more than 8,800 students failed the 2025 high school graduation exam, causing concern for many families. However, education experts affirm that this is not the end for the future, because in addition to the university path, students can choose to retake the course or switch to vocational education - a place that is "thirsty" for highly skilled human resources.
Many young people who have failed to graduate still find success thanks to vocational training and pursuing their passion. For example, Nguyen Van Khanh (Bac Giang) failed to graduate from high school in 2021. Not choosing to take the re-examination, Khanh registered to study refrigeration at a college. After 2 years of vocational training and internship at civil works, Khanh can now install, repair and receive dozens of orders each month. "Now my income is from 15-20 million VND/month" - Khanh shared.
Failure to graduate is just a "light slipped" not a failure. Students should be supported both mentally and methodically if they choose to take the re-examination. More importantly, society needs to change the concept - university graduation is not the only way to success. The real value lies in skills, attitude and determination, not just in qualifications. See more...