Shortage of pre-school teachers to worsen

The country’s pre-schools face and will continue to face a shortage of teachers until 2025, the head of the Ministry of Education and Training’s pre-school education department has warned.
Shortage of pre-school teachers to worsen ảnh 1A kindergarten in Son La province (Photo: VNA)

HCM City (VNS/VNA) -
The country’s pre-schools face and will continue to facea shortage of teachers until 2025, the head of the Ministry of Education andTraining’s pre-school education department has warned.

Speaking ata conference in HCM City earlier this week, Nguyen Ba Minh said theshortage would become more serious in remote areas in the Central Highlands,the north and the Mekong River Delta.

According toministry statistics, the current ratio is 1.82 teachers per class, meaningthere is a shortage of more than 45,000 teachers based on standards it has set.

Besides,only 73.7 percent of teachers meet standards spelt out in the 2019 EducationLaw.

The numberof pre-schoolers increases by 250,000 every year, and this puts great pressureon schools and teachers. In big cities, many teachers quit their jobs becauseof the hard work involved despite low salaries.

In futurepublic kindergartens plan to offer babysitting services after school toincrease their and teachers’ incomes.  

Besides, theprivate pre-school growth target of accounting for more than 25 percent of thetotal number of kindergartens by 2020 is difficult to achieve, especially inthe Central Highlands, the Mekong Delta and some northern mountain provinces,according to Minh.

There are3,180 of them now, or 20.6 percent of the total number, and 15,914 smallnurseries.

Manyprovinces and large cities face a shortage of land for setting up privatekindergartens.

Kindergartensat industrial parks do not yet benefit from incentives related to taxes andland lease.

Minhsuggested that local authorities should set up a clear legal framework andmethods to incentivise people to invest in kindergartens.   

In HCM City,879 out of its 1,346 kindergartens are private.

According tothe ministry, the number of private and public kindergartens in the countryincreased by 2,634 in the last 10 years while the number of children went up by1.5 million.

As ofDecember last year all 63 provinces and cities were providing compulsoryeducation for five-year-olds.  

DeputyMinister of Education and Training Ngo Thi Minh said her ministry wouldcontinue to petition the Government to address problems provinces and citiesface. 

She saideducation and training departments and authorities in provinces and citiesshould take the initiative to set up more kindergartens and create morefacilities for them, and train teachers to gradually end the shortage ofteachers.

Educationwould be made compulsory for four-year-old children by 2030, she said.

Under newGovernment policies, an allowance of at least 800,000 VND (34.6 USD) would bepaid to teachers at private kindergartens in industrial parks by localauthorities, she said.

Minh addedthat the Government would also pay allowances to private kindergarten teachers toattend training courses./.
VNA

See more

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Nguyen Quoc Dung speaks at the seminar. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam – US partnership expands in culture preservation, promotion

The May 18 seminar, themed “Reframing Vietnam,” at the National Museum of Asian Art (NMAA) under Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., is expected to generate fresh momentum and frameworks for cooperation among cultural agencies, museums, art funds and experts from the two countries, helping bring Vietnam’s cultural image closer to American and international public in the time to come.

Visitors to an exhibition and test-drive programme for electric vehicles organised in Cau Giay ward, Hanoi, on May 16 by the municipal People's Commitee and relevant agencies. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi proposes subsidies to accelerate shift to electric vehicles

Under a draft resolution currently open for public feedback by the municipal People’s Committee, residents with permanent or temporary residence registration in Hanoi for at least two consecutive years, who own petrol-powered motorbikes registered before the resolution takes effect, will be eligible for support when purchasing electric motorbikes priced at 10 million VND or more.

The copyright crackdown is broadly viewed as an inevitable step in Vietnam’s cultural industry development. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Healthy digital content market in the making

The sharper crackdown is rapidly redrawing how online entertainment is distributed and consumed, while gradually reshaping public awareness and responsibility toward copyright protection.

A view of Place Ho Chi Minh in Persan, France. (Photo: VNA)

Place preserving memories of President Ho Chi Minh in France

Although there is little publicly available documentation confirming exactly when Place Ho Chi Minh was established, French urban historians suggest that most streets and public spaces named after the Vietnamese leader in France emerged between the 1960s and 1980s, during the height of anti-war movements and solidarity campaigns supporting Vietnam across working-class towns and left-leaning suburbs around Paris.

Vietnamese Ambassador to Bangladesh Nguyen Manh Cuong speaks at the seminar. (Photo: VNA)

President Ho Chi Minh’s thought on national unity remains relevant today

President Ho Chi Minh's ideology of national unity continues to carry profound significance amid growing global challenges, including conflicts, social divisions and economic instability. His message of solidarity, consensus and placing national interests above sectional differences remains a valuable lesson for many developing nations.

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nguyen Duc Son presents the decision establishing the Vietnamese Language Proficiency Test Council in Japan to a representative of the Vietnam Studies Centre in Japan. (Photo: VNA)

Japan hosts first standardised Vietnamese language proficiency test

As bilateral ties between Vietnam and Japan continue to expand, demand for Vietnamese language learning in Japan has also grown rapidly among OVs, educational institutions, businesses and Japanese people interested in Vietnam. Against this backdrop, the introduction of a standardised proficiency test is expected to provide an official and widely recognised benchmark for Vietnamese language skills.