Luvia and Open Campus bring verifiable credentials to Vietnamese classrooms

A new partnership between Luvia and Open Campus will introduce portable, verifiable student credentials to Vietnamese learners, with a Ministry-backed pilot set to launch in Hanoi schools in early 2026.

Luvia and Open Campus have announced a partnership to roll out verifiable digital credentials for students in Vietnam, combining a consumer learning app with an in-school platform supported by the Ministry of Education and Training.

The initiative signals a growing push to modernize student records and credentialing in emerging EdTech markets, with potential implications for skills portability, admissions, and workforce pathways.

The collaboration integrates Open Campus ID into Luvia’s mobile learning app and its forthcoming school-facing learning management platform. Together, the tools are designed to give students a portable record of verified learning that can be recognized across institutions and, over time, employers.

Mobile learning app and Ministry-backed school pilot

Luvia’s mobile app, launched on iOS and Android in November 2025, is currently targeting students across its partner school network, representing around 200,000 learners. The app focuses on high school and university students and structures the Vietnamese high school curriculum into modular content with personalized practice tests.

In early 2026, Luvia plans to pilot its in-school learning management platform in selected Hanoi schools, with support from the Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training. The school platform is intended to automate administrative tasks, support communication between teachers, parents, and students, and issue verifiable credentials tied to demonstrated learning.

By the end of 2026, Luvia says it plans to scale the platform across schools and universities nationwide, potentially reaching more than ten million students.

Verifiable credentials and learner passports

Through integration with Open Campus ID, students using Luvia receive a persistent digital identity that allows learning achievements to be verified and reused across systems. As students complete learning activities in the app or classroom, they earn blockchain-verified credentials that contribute to a digital curriculum vitae.

According to Hailey Nguyen, Founder and CEO at Luvia, “At Luvia, we’re focused on helping every learner progress every day. By pairing a simple, high-quality learning app with portable, verifiable credentials, students can carry their achievements wherever opportunity arises.”

Jonah Lau, Project Lead and Core Contributor at Open Campus, says, “Open Campus ID and verifiable credentials make student records portable and privacy-preserving. We’re excited to support Luvia and Vietnam’s education ecosystem with trusted, reusable proof of learning.”

The Ministry has positioned the Hanoi pilot as an opportunity to test whether the approach can improve efficiency and student outcomes. Phung Thi Ly Hang, Vice Director of Education Training at the Ministry of Education and Training, says, “We welcome pilots that enhance teaching efficiency and help learners demonstrate verified progress. We look forward to reviewing pilot outcomes in Hanoi.”

The partners say verified credentials issued through Luvia could be used beyond the app, including for education financing, digital CVs, admissions verification, and employer screening. Luvia and Open Campus are also in discussions with Vietnamese financial institutions, including VietinBank, VietcomBank, and BIDV, about potential collaboration.

ETIH Innovation Awards 2026

The ETIH Innovation Awards 2026 are now open and recognize education technology organizations delivering measurable impact across K–12, higher education, and lifelong learning. The awards are open to entries from the UK, the Americas, and internationally, with submissions assessed on evidence of outcomes and real-world application.

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