Vietnam has 2 million teachers and 24 million students. In December 2024, Resolution 57-NQ/TW issued a national mandate for AI literacy across every public sector — including every classroom. As OECD education director Andreas Schleicher observes, "The quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers." The mandate is national. The delivery mechanism did not exist.
Three structural barriers explain why: teaching materials and curricula are locked in static 3–5-year update cycles; language barriers restrict access to global AI tools built for English speakers; and cultural and curriculum mismatches render imported edtech inaccessible for Vietnam's diverse classrooms.
These barriers fall hardest in provinces like Điện Biên — a northern highland province bordering Laos, where 80% of teachers serve ethnic minority communities, commercial providers have no economic incentive to arrive, and government training mandates existed without curriculum, platform, or measurement behind them. Teachers there had heard of AI. None had received training they could apply in their classroom on Monday.
STEAM for Vietnam built EduOne to close the gap between national mandate and classroom reality — starting where all three barriers are most acute, and building a national delivery architecture from the start, not an isolated pilot.
EduOne is Vietnam's first AI-native learning platform — built for the million teachers who have never used AI, and designed to work inside provincial government infrastructure rather than alongside it.
The platform delivers modular, bite-sized content across four formats that a learner can choose from: comics, podcasts, interactive lessons, and games. The same concept appears across formats, reinforcing retention through spaced retrieval — a learner may revisit the same idea up to five times without experiencing repetition. Each learner is accompanied by OctoAI, a 24/7 Vietnamese-language AI tutor built jointly with Meta and AI for Vietnam that answers questions, guides lesson progress, and adapts in real time. Individual learners access EduOne free. Provinces access it through government MOUs — the institutional model that makes national coverage viable.
The evidence: Điện Biên, Vietnam's most remote province and 80% ethnic minority — 17,000 teachers reached 100% AI readiness in 60 days. Pre/post assessment across 1,999 participants showed measurable gains in AI tool confidence and classroom application. Satisfaction above 90%. In the national OctoAI cohort: 7,000 educators registered across all 34 provinces; 2,900 began full coursework; satisfaction reached 4.58 out of 5. These results come from a cloud-based platform accessible via mobile or laptop — no specialist infrastructure required.
Teachers are the system's force multiplier: each one trained reaches 20–30 students daily. That is why the delivery model works through provincial MOUs, not individual sign-ups — every province becomes a proof point that unlocks the next. Tuyên Quang was the 2024 pilot, funded by Meta. Điện Biên was 2025 — a Google.org AI for Changemakers grant (one of 30 awarded globally), full-province rollout: 17,000 teachers, 80% ethnic minority, 100% AI readiness in 60 days. When those results were published, Tuyên Quang's Department of Science and Technology requested programme replication independently. Peer adoption requiring no external push is evidence of a working cascade model.
EduOne's curriculum is already MOET-verified — institutionally validated for nationwide deployment. Two provincial deployments anchor the proof: Tuyên Quang (2026, Meta-funded) and Điện Biên (2025 phase 1 and phase 2 2026, Google Edu-funded). AVPN multi-year funding (2024–2027) now supports expansion beyond teachers to civil servants, healthcare workers, and journalists — a 30,000-graduate milestone is scheduled for 13 May 2026 toward a 100,000-graduate national pathway by 2027. The two-to-three-year goal is a formal national MOU with Vietnam's Ministry of Education and Training, establishing EduOne as the default AI literacy pathway for all 2 million teachers — and a replicable model for any nation with a tiered education governance structure.
EduOne has evolved through four phases, each gated on what the previous revealed.
Phase 1 — Pilot at small scale (2024).
Phase 2 — Systemic proof at province level (2025). Điện Biên: 17,000 teachers, 80% ethnic minority, 100% AI-readiness in 60 days. The cascade held in Vietnam's hardest contexts. MOET verified the curriculum — institutional foundation for national deployment.
Phase 3 — National education with AI-enabled new learning experience (Q1 2026). EduOne rebuilt AI-native. OctoAI multi-agent embedded — every teacher gained a 24/7 Vietnamese AI tutor. Multi-modal formats (comics, podcasts, interactive simulations) replaced single-mode video. Three pillars formalized: Interactive · Frequent · Enjoyable · 24/7 Tutor. Scaling toward 150,000 teachers.
Phase 4 — Teachers' tool + multi-institutions on EduOne (Q2 2026 →). Teachers transition from learners to creators, generating AI-powered lesson materials on the platform.
Individuals: try EduOne free at apps.lms.eduone.ai — 24/7 Vietnamese AI tutor live. Schools, NGOs, ministries:
hello@steamforvietnam.org for the adoption package (curriculum, platform, cascade, MOU, etc.)