VR replicates combat scenarios and flight situations to improve understanding of emergency responses and adaptability.
Virtual Reality (VR) was first embraced in Western countries and is now off to Vietnam as a powerful tool to transform traditional teaching methods, replacing a top-down or whiteboard-only discussion with a more interactive and easier-to-perceive environment.
Credited by scientific researchers, immersive “classrooms” motivate students to open up for wider cognitive and practical experiences, later improving their lateral thinking on the given subject.
In 2017, Duy Tan University applied VR to the human body as a research facility for Health Sciences education, and the project won first prize at the Vietnamese Talent Awards ceremony. The “Basic Electronic Virtual Laboratory” by the College of Information Technology in Ha Noi is also one of the most practical VR applications that allow students to build experiments with better storing and sharing systems. Later on, the technology has been brought to strategic consulting, and communication campaigns for major brands locally and internationally, by leading businesses such as Co-Well Asia, ADT Creative or VR Tech.
In the aviation industry, academies have been utilizing VR to improve training outcomes by simulating complex procedures such as aircraft maintenance, ground crew control, flight operations, or search and rescue programs. Based on real-time performance, learners can encounter deeper responses across aviation disciplines in a controlled environment. Moving along broader trends in global education, EON-XR – a strategic product of EON Reality Vietnam has offered a smooth process of digital assets exchange across millions of institutional libraries, enabling Vietnam to emerge as a proactive player.
The promising launch of VR-based training methods reveals a commitment to reinforce a more skillful aviation workforce that is capable of international standards, keeping Vietnam as a competitive player in the evolving aviation industry. VR-based training methods highlights the country’s commitment to building a more skilled aviation workforce that meets international standards, ensuring that Vietnam remains competitive in a rapidly evolving global aviation industry.