Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle D— - Air Force and Space Force › Part PART III— - TRAINING › Chapter CHAPTER 951— - TRAINING GENERALLY › § 9414a
The Secretary of the Air Force may allow certain private-sector workers to attend the United States Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT). These workers can take graduate degree programs or professional continuing-education certificates that focus on defense or homeland security topics, in areas like aeronautics, electrical and computer engineering, engineering physics, math and statistics, operational sciences, or systems and engineering management. No more than 125 such private-sector students may be enrolled at one time. If they finish the program, they can get the same AFIT degree or certificate that other students receive. Covered private sector employee — someone who works for a company that provides major defense systems or for a firm in a critical infrastructure sector named in Presidential Policy Directive 21. They must keep working for the same firm to stay eligible. Before each school year, the Secretary (or someone the Secretary names) must decide that admitting these students will help AFIT’s mission and will not require more faculty, courses, labs, or facilities. AFIT must offer programs that are not easily found elsewhere and that focus on work done by the military and defense or homeland-security contractors together. Tuition for these students must be at least the rate charged to U.S. employees outside the Air Force, and the school must keep the money to pay program costs and record where it came from. While studying, these private-sector students must generally follow the same academic and conduct rules as government civilian students.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
10 U.S.C. § 9414a
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73