FIELDS TO NURTURE
See how your seeds of support help students bloom
Adopt future leaders & give ACCESS to world-class education
Excellent students who are offered as much as 90% scholarship still cannot come to VinUni because their family cannot afford the remaining 10% of the tuition.
Give that 10% to allow them to study at VinUni and develop into future leaders
- $3,500 per student per year
- $14,000 per student for 4 years
- Adopt as many leaders as you want
- The grant will be named after you
Free future leaders from worries so that they can FOCUS and thrive
Safe Haven Fund to support their accommodation.
- $100 per student per month
- $1,000 per student per year
Food Energizer Fund to support their meals.
- $50 per student per month
- $500 per student per year
Enable future leaders to SHINE
Make it possible for students to showcase their brilliance at national/international competitions and conferences.
- $300 per event
Nurture future leaders to BLOOM
Global Horizons Fund to strengthen students’ global perspectives and capability.
- $1,000 per student
Local Impact Fund to grow student’s compassion for local society through community service projects.
- $500 per student
Allow future leaders to GROW where the need is strongest
Your gift can go where it matters most – from supporting scholarships and research to boosting student wellness and innovation.
- You name your amount.
Give to The Seed Fund
This booklet introduces the many ways you can support VinUniversity. Inside, you will find giving opportunities, donor stories, and the impact your contributions can create for our students and community. It serves as a guide to help you choose how you would like to make a difference
Explore our students' stories
Nguyen Thu Ha Anh
College of Business and Management
I thank VinUniversity and Dean Choi Grant by Soosan for changing my life.” – Nguyen Thu Ha Anh – Cohort 2 – College of Business and Management One seed you plant can change a life. One life can inspire many. Meet Nguyen Thu Ha Anh – one of the first recipients of the grant at […]
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Nguyen Do Thu Phuong
College of Health Sciences
Thu Phuong grew up in the highlands of Vietnam in a small city called Bao Loc. Her father was a carpenter and her mother was a secondary school teacher. Phuong grew up in not good economic conditions. The place where she lived lacked access to high quality education, so she had to work hard and […]
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Khadijah Adamu Sunkani
College of Health Sciences
Khadijah attended a school that taught in both Arabic and English, skipped grades 9 and 10 to graduate with honors at 16. She pushed through quickly because her family needed a medical person to help her father manage his diabetes. She had watched her father’s nurses help him with his care and wanted to do […]
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