Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - TEACHER QUALITY ENHANCEMENT › § 1021
Defines the main words used in this part of the law. "Arts and sciences" — college departments that offer majors for the subjects teachers teach, or the subject areas those departments cover. "Children from low-income families" — the kids described in section 6333(c)(1)(A) of the law. "Core academic subjects" — English/reading/language arts, math, science, foreign languages, civics/government, economics, arts, history, and geography. "Early childhood educator" — a person mainly responsible for teaching kids in an early childhood program. "Educational service agency" — the agency defined in section 7801. "Eligible partnership" — a group that must include a high-need local school district, a high-need school or high-need early childhood program, a partner college or university, that college’s school/department of education, and its arts and sciences department; it may also include state officials, state education agencies, businesses, nonprofits, teacher groups, high-performing districts, charter schools, certain college departments, or providers of alternative teacher certification. "Essential components of reading instruction" and "exemplary teacher" — as those terms were defined in the law the day before December 10, 2015. "High-need early childhood education program" — an early childhood program serving low-income children inside a high-need district. "High-need local educational agency" — a district that has at least 20 percent low-income children, or serves at least 10,000 low-income children, or qualifies for certain small/rural federal programs, and that also has many teachers teaching outside their trained subjects, or high turnover, or many teachers with emergency or temporary credentials. "High-need school" — a school in the top quarter of its district for percent of low-income students by certain poverty measures, or an elementary school where at least 60 percent get free/reduced lunch, or a non-elementary school where at least 45 percent do; the Secretary may also approve other schools as high-need if an eligible partnership applies and provides detailed poverty, achievement, and (for secondary schools) graduation data. "Highly competent" (early childhood educator) — has specialized training for birth-to-kindergarten, a bachelor’s degree in arts and sciences or an associate’s in a related area, and has shown strong knowledge and teaching ability. "Induction program" — a formal support program for new teachers for at least their first two years that includes mentoring, structured collaboration, research-based practice, faculty support, training in interventions, use of data, and regular observation and evaluation. "Limited English proficient," "parent," and "professional development" — defined as in section 7801. "Partner institution" — a college in the partnership whose teacher-prep program either has 80 percent or more of graduates passing required state tests for new teachers or ranks among the state's top programs, and that requires high standards, clinical experience, state certification for teacher candidates, and degree/competency standards for early childhood educators. "Principles of scientific research" — rigorous, systematic methods that use data, reliable measures, clear reporting, peer review, and results that hold up across studies; "scientifically valid research" — applied, basic, or field research that follows those principles. "Teacher mentoring" — a mentoring program with clear mentor selection, strong training, classroom observation time, paid release when needed, same-subject mentoring, use of evidence-based practices, shared planning time, and joint professional learning. "Teaching residency program" — a school-based program where a prospective teacher spends one academic year teaching with a mentor, gets concurrent college instruction, gains effective skills, earns full State certification, and completes a master’s degree within 18 months after starting. "Teaching skills" — the abilities to raise student learning, explain subject matter, teach higher-order thinking, use evidence-based strategies for many student needs, assess learning, manage classrooms, work with parents, and for early childhood teachers, use age-appropriate practices.
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Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1021
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73