The 2027 high school graduation exam will be held in June 2027, conducted on computers at qualified locations and on paper at other exam sites.
At a recent conference summarizing the organization of the 2025 exam and preparing for the 2026 high school graduation exam, the Ministry of Education and Training announced several directions and timelines for preparing to conduct the high school graduation exam on computers in 2027.
The 2027 high school graduation exam will be held in June 2027, conducted on computers at qualified locations and on paper at other exam sites.
Many outstanding advantages
In the context of strong digital transformation, Vietnam’s education sector is facing an important turning point following the Prime Minister’s directive: transitioning from paper-based high school graduation and university entrance exams to computer-based testing.
Globally, the two common computer-based testing models today are CBT (Computer-Based Testing) – linear fixed-structure testing and CAT (Computerized Adaptive Testing) – adaptive testing where questions are adjusted according to the student’s ability.
Both are considered inevitable trends for modernizing examination work, improving assessment quality, and international integration.
In Vietnam, some universities have applied CBT in their competency assessment exams, while to fulfill assigned tasks, the Ministry of Education and Training also aims to implement it for the high school graduation exam starting from 2027.
However, to succeed and gradually approach CAT, many challenges regarding question banks, infrastructure, human resources, and result recognition mechanisms need to be addressed.
Compared to traditional methods, computer-based testing has many outstanding advantages. Results are automatically and quickly scored, minimizing subjective errors and shortening announcement time.
This format also saves printing and transportation costs while supporting diverse question types, from multiple-choice to simulated scenarios.
Particularly, CBT is flexible in organization, allowing multiple exam sessions and rounds throughout the year, even remote online testing. Another important advantage is allowing students to take exams multiple times, similar to international exams like IELTS, TOEFL, or SAT.
Having opportunities to improve scores helps students view assessment as a learning activity, reducing pressure and accurately reflecting students’ actual abilities.
Common misunderstandings
A common misunderstanding is that computer-based testing means each student must have their own computer. In reality, major exams worldwide apply the test-center model.
Students go to exam centers equipped with standard computers and can take multiple sessions per day. This approach saves costs while ensuring fairness and avoiding inequality due to economic conditions. This is also a suitable direction for Vietnam, instead of scattered investments causing waste.
CBT and CAT are two models that need clear distinction. CBT is a testing format where the entire exam, answers, and scoring are conducted on computers with a fixed structure. This is currently the most common model, offering many benefits in speed, accuracy, and convenience.
CAT is a higher development stage, where the system adjusts question difficulty based on the student’s previous answers. This makes exams shorter while still accurately assessing individual abilities.
CAT has been applied in international exams like GMAT or GRE, demonstrating the potential for personalization and fairness in assessment.
In Vietnam, computer-based competency assessment exams were first implemented at Hanoi National University in 2014, followed by Hanoi University of Science and Technology and Ho Chi Minh City University of Education also conducting computer-based testing, all following the linear CBT model.
This is an important step to accumulate experience, gradually progressing toward CAT when conditions for question banks and technology permit.
