Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part Part A— - Grants to Students in Attendance at Institutions of Higher Education › Subpart subpart 2— - federal early outreach and student services programs › § 1070a–14
The Education Department must run a Student Support Services program to help eligible college students stay in school, finish their degrees, and move from 2-year to 4-year colleges. The program must also make campuses more welcoming for students who are limited English proficient, from groups underrepresented in higher education, have disabilities, are homeless or in foster care, or are otherwise disconnected. It must teach basic money and economic skills, like personal budgeting and simple decision-making. Projects must provide tutoring, help choosing classes, information on federal student aid and scholarships and help filling out the FAFSA, financial education, help applying to graduate or professional school, and help 2-year students apply to 4-year programs. Projects may also offer one-on-one counseling, career information, cultural and academic exposure, mentoring, and temporary housing during school breaks for homeless or foster students. Grant funds may be used to give students cash awards that are no more than the Pell Grant amount they could get and not less than the minimum Pell Grant for the year. Grants must be coordinated with the school’s financial aid office. To get a grant, students must be active in the program and usually be first- or second-year Pell recipients, though later-year Pell students at high risk of dropping out may qualify if first-year needs are met. Grant aid generally won’t count against a student’s federal need calculation, but total federal aid can’t exceed the cost of attendance. Schools that use funds for student grants must match at least 33% in nonfederal cash (with some institutional exceptions), cannot spend more than 20% of program funds on grants, and must use federal funds to add to—not replace—other nonfederal supports. When approving projects, the Department requires that at least two-thirds of participants be people with disabilities or low-income, first-generation students, with other numerical and need-based assurances, enrollment checks, and consideration of the school’s record on financial aid and student loan burden.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1070a–14
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73