Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part Part B— - Federal Family Education Loan Program › § 1078–11
The Secretary will cancel part of a borrower’s federal student loan if the borrower works full-time in certain high-need jobs and is not behind on the loan. For each full school, academic, or calendar year of such full-time work done on or after August 14, 2008, up to $2,000 of the loan can be forgiven. A borrower can get no more than $10,000 total and no more than five years of forgiveness. The program is run through the loan holder or by canceling certain loans under part D. Forgiveness is given on a first-come, first-served basis and only if money is available. The Secretary can make rules to run the program. The law does not allow repaying someone money they already paid, and the same service cannot be used to get loan cuts under other federal teacher or service loan programs. The law covers many kinds of full-time work in areas of national need, including early childhood educators; nurses and nursing faculty; teachers and faculty using critical foreign languages; librarians and teachers in high-poverty schools; teachers of English learners and other priority teacher roles; child welfare social workers; speech-language pathologists and audiologists in eligible schools; school counselors; public safety and emergency workers; public health workers and allied health professionals; dietitians working for WIC; certain medical trainees in shortage programs; mental health providers for children, adolescents, or veterans; dentists and dental faculty; STEM workers; physical and occupational therapists; and school leaders in high-need districts. Defined terms include allied health professional (health worker with a degree or certificate), audiologist (graduate-level hearing specialist), early childhood educator (teacher of children up to age five with a relevant degree), eligible preschool or early childhood program (licensed programs serving young children), low-income community (a defined low-income school area), nurse (licensed nursing graduate), occupational therapist, physical therapist, and speech-language pathologist (each described by the degree and practice rules needed). Funds were authorized for fiscal year 2009 and each of the five years after that to carry out the program.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1078–11
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73