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You are here: Home / cat / Why Promoting Girls in STEM Is Vital for Vietnam’s Tech Growth

Why Promoting Girls in STEM Is Vital for Vietnam’s Tech Growth

Dated: March 9, 2026

Trần Thị Thu Quỳnh grew up in a small family in Lạng Sơn, northern Vietnam, and defied local norms by completing high school and pursuing electronics and telecommunication engineering at university. Her studies were nearly derailed when both her parents were diagnosed with cancer, but a scholarship from The Asia Foundation allowed her to continue her education while her mother focused on treatment. Quỳnh excelled academically, earned awards, completed research and internships, and today works as a quality-assurance engineer at a multinational company, contributing to digital solutions.

Vietnam’s push toward a knowledge-based, innovation-driven economy has created unprecedented demand for STEM talent, yet girls and young women—particularly from rural, mountainous, and ethnic minority communities—remain underrepresented in these fields. Structural barriers such as financial hardship, limited exposure to STEM careers, gender norms, and digital access gaps continue to limit participation, making it both a social equity and strategic economic issue.

For over two decades, The Asia Foundation’s STEM pathway program has addressed these challenges through an ecosystem-based approach. Initially a scholarship-focused initiative, it has grown to support students from secondary school through higher education and into the workforce. The program pairs financial aid with academic mentoring, skills development, career guidance, and partnerships with schools, teachers, and provincial stakeholders to create inclusive STEM environments aligned with Vietnam’s priority science and technology sectors.

By supporting young women like Quỳnh, the program builds confidence, problem-solving skills, and digital literacy, preparing them for global careers in historically male-dominated fields. Nearly 4,000 young women have benefited, demonstrating the model’s effectiveness, though scaling remains necessary to meet national needs.

The next phase emphasizes integrated financial and academic support, future-ready skills, career-oriented training with employer linkages, and strengthened gender-responsive STEM environments. Achieving sustainable impact requires long-term, flexible investment from bilateral donors, the Vietnamese government, and civil society partners.

Vietnam’s prosperity depends on a skilled, innovative, and inclusive workforce, with young women at the center. Investing in girls’ STEM education transforms individual lives, empowers communities, and advances national goals in digital transformation, workforce development, and gender equality. Quỳnh’s journey exemplifies the opportunities possible when barriers are removed, inspiring more young women to pursue STEM careers and contribute to Vietnam’s innovation-driven future.

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