Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part Part C— - Federal Work-Study Programs › § 1087–58
Provides money and rules to help colleges run full work-learning-service programs that cut student borrowing and mix work, learning, and community service. Schools can use funds already given under related student-aid parts, plus money specifically set aside here, but they must apply and get approval from the Secretary first. Approved schools may use the money to help pay student education costs through work credits or payments, promote and run work-service programs, develop and assess those programs (including community-based options), run joint projects, and study long-term student outcomes like loan repayment and career or service paths. Schools must match every federal dollar with one dollar from nonfederal sources. Money is authorized for fiscal year 2009 and each of the five succeeding fiscal years. Work college — a public or private nonprofit, four-year school with a community-service focus that has run a full work-learning-service program at least two years and requires at least half of full-time students to work five hours a week or 80 hours each enrollment period (except summer). Comprehensive student work-learning-service program — a program officially part of the school’s curriculum that requires resident students to take part, sets learning goals and work evaluation, is led by staff, recognizes supervisors’ teaching roles, and has penalties for nonperformance similar to academic failure.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1087–58
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73