Luvia & Open Campus launch digital IDs for students
Luvia and Open Campus have formed a partnership that links a Vietnamese learning app and a school platform with digital IDs and verifiable credentials for students.
The companies said the work covers two initiatives. One is a personalised learning mobile app for high school and university students. The other is a learning management platform for schools. Both integrate Open Campus ID and verifiable credentials.
Luvia said its mobile app launched on iOS and Android in late November 2025. The company said it is initially targeting students in its partner school network, which it put at about 200,000 students.
The app presents content from the Vietnamese high-school curriculum in modules and mindmaps. It also includes practice tests and on-demand materials. Luvia said students can study at their own pace.
Luvia said the app includes features that connect teachers, schools and parents. Educators can follow student progress inside the system, according to the company. Schools can use the app as a companion that aligns with the curriculum, it added. Parents can also access information on progress, it said.
Hanoi pilot
Luvia said it will pilot its in-school learning management platform in selected Hanoi schools in early 2026. The company said the Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training will support the pilot.
Luvia described the platform as a way to automate routine administration for teachers and schools. It also described an approach that links schools, teachers, parents and learners through communications tools.
A key element of the pilot is the use of portable, verifiable credentials. Luvia said students will receive credentials that prove skills across apps, schools and employers. The companies said the integration with Open Campus ID makes student records portable and privacy-preserving.
Luvia said it aims to scale the learning management platform across schools and universities in Vietnam by the end of 2026. It estimated the potential combined population at more than ten million students.
Digital records
Open Campus ID sits at the centre of the partnership. The companies described it as a digital identity layer that can carry verified learning records across institutions and platforms.
As students demonstrate mastery in the Luvia app and in classrooms, the system issues credentials that the companies described as blockchain-verified. The companies also described a digital curriculum vitae that draws on those credentials.
They set out several intended uses for verified records. These include employer verification, admissions submissions, and sharing skills and completions in a privacy-preserving way. They also mentioned education financing tied to verified progress and badges, and a partner perks marketplace linked to specific achievements.
Open Campus said it operates as a community-led decentralised autonomous organisation. It said core contributors include Animoca Brands, TinyTap, NewCampus, RiseIn, and HackQuest. Open Campus also cited EDU Chain, which it described as an Arbitrum Orbit blockchain for education apps and on-chain education finance.
Stakeholder views
Hailey Nguyen, Founder and CEO, Luvia, linked the credential layer to student mobility across education and work.
"At Luvia, we're focused on helping every learner progress every day. By pairing a simple, high‐quality learning app with portable, verifiable credentials, students can carry their achievements wherever opportunity arises," said Hailey Nguyen, Founder and CEO, Luvia.
Open Campus described privacy and reusability as two design points for its approach to student records.
"Open Campus ID and verifiable credentials make student records portable and privacy‐preserving. We're excited to support Luvia and Vietnam's education ecosystem with trusted, reusable proof of learning," said Jonah Lau, Project Lead and Core Contributor at Open Campus.
The Ministry of Education and Training framed the Hanoi pilot in terms of efficiency and verified progress.
"We welcome pilots that enhance teaching efficiency and help learners demonstrate verified progress. We look forward to reviewing pilot outcomes in Hanoi," said Phung Thi Ly Hang, Vice Director of Education Training at the Ministry of Education and Training (MOET).
Luvia and Open Campus also said they are discussing collaboration opportunities in Vietnam with potential partners that include VietinBank, VietcomBank, and BIDV.