In the context of the constantly changing labor market and the increasing demand for human resources with practical skills, short-term training programs are becoming a "hot" trend. Not only young people are interested, many married people, over 30 years old still choose to study new majors.
Video : Short-term vocational training skyrockets in many "hot" industries
Learn more, increase income
Although she has only had 2 classes, Ms. Nguyen Ai My (30 years old, Ho Chi Minh City) has gradually mastered the steps to mix a cocktail. Ms. My said she is married and has a small child. It was her husband who encouraged her and made her register for additional classes.
"My family is very supportive of me going back to school. I also really like mixing drinks and being creative. Even though my husband takes care of the finances , I still dream of starting my own business with a small cafe," said My.
After the course, Ms. My plans to start a business with a small coffee shop near her house.
Le Tuong Dinh (18 years old), studying hotel management at college, said she has registered for an additional short-term cooking course.
"After completing this course, I plan to learn more about F&B to develop more comprehensively in the field of food and beverage services and hotels. Thanks to that, I will have multidisciplinary skills, easily adapting to the labor market after graduating from secondary school" - Dinh expressed.
Go to school to find human resources for businesses
MSc. Tran Phuong, Principal of Viet Giao Secondary School, said that unlike long-term training programs (from 3-4 years), short-term courses last from 1-6 months or less than 1 year, with no age limit and flexible study time.
"In the first 6 months of 2025, the school enrolled and had about 500-600 students graduate from short-term training programs, 4 times higher than the same period last year" - MSc. Phuong informed.
Of which, 4 groups with high demand for short-term study include: people who need to change careers, improve skills, find a part-time job and study to work abroad.
The duration of short-term vocational classes is flexible, with each class having 4-8 students, allowing instructors to closely monitor students' practice.
Notably, the student population is increasingly diverse in terms of age and education level. From students to hotel and resort owners, even business managers with postgraduate degrees are seeking new vocational courses.
In the first 6 months of 2025, Ho Chi Minh City had 3,523 people receiving vocational training support, an increase of 5% over the same period. It is expected that in the third quarter of 2025, the new Ho Chi Minh City will need to recruit 85,000-90,000 workers. Of which, about 58% are unskilled workers.
MSc. Phuong commented: "Their goal is not only to learn a trade, but also to gain in-depth understanding, know how to find and develop quality human resources for their businesses. Obviously, short-term study is now not a short-term vision, but the beginning of building skills, accumulating finances and moving towards a sustainable career journey."
Although short-term enrollment is "bumper", Master Phuong said that vocational training institutions are still struggling to enroll full-time intermediate and college students. Almost all vocational schools now have to "take short-term to support long-term", covering their economic expenses based on short-term training courses.
Source: https://nld.com.vn/hoc-nghe-ngan-han-boi-thu-o-nhieu-nganh-hot-196250719232505526.htm
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