The Sino-Vietnamese Higher Education Forum: A Milestone at Tsinghua University
On April 14, 2026, Tsinghua University in Beijing hosted the Vietnam-China Forum on Higher Education, Science, Technology, and Innovation Cooperation, a pivotal event that underscored the deepening academic bonds between the two nations. Organized jointly by Vietnam's Ministry of Education and Training (MOET) and China's Ministry of Education (MOE), with Tsinghua University and Vietnam National University, Hanoi (VNU Hanoi) as co-hosts, the forum drew representatives from approximately 100 leading higher education institutions from both countries. The presence of Vietnam's General Secretary and President To Lam elevated the gathering, marking a strategic push to integrate education as a core pillar of bilateral relations.
This forum arrives at a time when both Vietnam and China are accelerating their ambitions in science and technology. Vietnam aims to achieve high-income status by 2045, while China continues to lead globally in fields like artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductors. The event not only celebrated existing ties but also charted a roadmap for collaborative breakthroughs, positioning Chinese universities like Tsinghua at the forefront of regional innovation ecosystems.
To Lam's Visionary Keynote: Education as a New Pillar of Ties
President To Lam's policy speech set the tone, declaring China a 'top priority' in Vietnam's foreign policy. He highlighted the shared geography, history, and cultural affinities that have bound the two nations for millennia, evolving into robust people-to-people exchanges. Notably, around 25,000 Vietnamese students are currently pursuing studies in China, a testament to the appeal of Chinese higher education.
To Lam called for science, technology, innovation, and digital transformation to emerge as 'new pillars' alongside traditional economic cooperation. He urged expanded exchanges between Tsinghua and Vietnamese universities, emphasizing joint laboratories, student mobility, and research in high-priority areas. His address resonated with Tsinghua's faculty and students, reinforcing the university's role in nurturing future leaders—many of whom, like President Xi Jinping, have ties to the institution that foster goodwill toward Vietnam.
The speech outlined concrete steps: enhancing infrastructure connectivity (railways, border gates), fostering youth entrepreneurship in healthcare, energy, and smart cities, and managing differences through mutual respect. This vision aligns seamlessly with China's 'Double First-Class' initiative, which elevates universities like Tsinghua in global rankings.
52 Groundbreaking Cooperation Agreements Signed
A highlight was the signing of 52 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) between Vietnamese and Chinese universities, focusing on training, research, and technology transfer. These pacts represent a quantum leap, building on prior collaborations.
- Vietnam National University Hanoi (VNU Hanoi) inked deals with Tsinghua, Fudan University, China Foreign Affairs University, and Guangxi University.
- University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City (UEH) partnered with Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU) and Dongbei University of Finance and Economics.
- Duy Tan University (DTU) signed with Tianjin University.
- University of Da Nang (UD) collaborated with SJTU and Beijing-based institutions.
These agreements cover student and faculty exchanges, joint degree programs, co-supervised PhDs, and shared labs. For Chinese universities, this opens doors to Vietnam's burgeoning market, with its young population and rapid digitalization.
Tsinghua University's Central Role in Bridging Nations
As China's premier engineering and tech powerhouse, Tsinghua University spearheaded the forum, leveraging its strengths in AI (ranked top globally), computer science, and innovation. The university already boasts partnerships with five Vietnamese institutions, nine prior agreements, and 81 Vietnamese alumni or current students—'TsinghuaRen' who serve as friendship ambassadors.
Tsinghua's recent MoU renewal with VNU Hanoi exemplifies this: joint AI research, credit recognition, and enterprise-linked training. Vice Minister Ren Youqun's address praised such initiatives, calling for more 'substantive' collaborations. President Qiu Yong's prior Vietnam visit in 2025 laid groundwork, signing student exchanges that now facilitate bidirectional flows.
For Tsinghua faculty, this means expanded funding via Belt and Road scholarships and joint grants; students gain international exposure in ASEAN.
Explore Tsinghua's global partnershipsPriority Areas: AI, Semiconductors, and Beyond
The forum pinpointed strategic domains where Chinese expertise meets Vietnam's needs:
| Focus Area | Key Initiatives |
|---|---|
| Artificial Intelligence & Big Data | Joint labs, co-PhDs (Tsinghua-VNU) |
| Semiconductors & Robotics | Tech transfer, enterprise training |
| Green Tech & Biotech | Student startups, innovation hubs |
| Clean Energy & New Materials | Research groups, ASEAN connectivity |
Vietnam MOET Minister Hoang Minh Son proposed joint innovation centers and university-enterprise models, echoing China's 'talent bases' like Tsinghua-PBOC fintech pact. These align with China's 14th Five-Year Plan, enhancing its regional leadership.
Boosting Student Mobility and Exchanges
With 25,000 Vietnamese in China, exchanges are booming—doubled since 2023. Tsinghua hosts dozens, offering scholarships and dual degrees. Reverse flows: Chinese students explore Vietnam's tropical biotech via new pacts.
Benefits include cultural immersion, language skills (Mandarin-Hanoi programs), and career edges. Graduates often join Belt and Road projects, fostering lifelong ties.
Joint Research and Innovation Ecosystems
Beyond exchanges, forums stress labs and hubs. Tsinghua-VNU AI center (2025) exemplifies: shared datasets, publications. New MoUs enable tech commercialization, vital for China's IP push.
Challenges: language barriers, funding. Solutions: digital platforms, enterprise co-funding.
Vietnamese Universities' Active Engagement
Leading VN unis like VNU, UEH, DTU drove participation, signing multiple MoUs. This diversifies partnerships beyond Tsinghua to SJTU, Fudan—expanding CN unis' ASEAN footprint.
Read To Lam's full speech highlightsOfficial Perspectives and Commitments
CN Vice MOE Ren Youqun endorsed 'high-quality' ties; VN's Bui The Duy (VNU) called for long-term models. These signal sustained policy support.
Historical Context and Evolving Ties
Sino-VN higher ed roots trace to 1950s scholarships. Post-2010s, exchanges surged via ASEAN+3. Forum builds on 2025 VNU-Tsinghua network.
Future Outlook: Challenges and Opportunities
Prospects: 100+ new programs by 2030, joint campuses? Challenges: geopolitical tensions, quality alignment. For CN unis: talent influx, research impact.
Career implications: Faculty jobs in joint centers via AcademicJobs.com higher ed jobs; students eye intl roles.
Global Implications for Chinese Higher Education
This forum positions China as ASEAN edu hub, rivaling US/Aus. Tsinghua's model—elite partnerships, tech focus—sets benchmark, driving rankings, funding.
Photo by Dynamic Wang on Unsplash

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