Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - NATIONAL ACTIVITIES TO IMPROVE EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › Part Part B— - Personnel Preparation, Technical Assistance, Model Demonstration Projects, and Dissemination of Information › § 1462
The Secretary must award competitive grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements to eligible groups to train and improve people who work with infants, toddlers, and children with disabilities. The work funded must help states meet their reported needs for qualified staff. Projects should make sure teachers and related school staff have skills based on proven research, focus on academics, help regular teachers teach students with disabilities in regular classrooms, make sure special education teachers meet required qualifications, and include training in technology, early intervention and transition services, working with parents, and positive behavioral supports. Grants can also pay for professional development for principals and superintendents in instructional leadership, behavior supports, paperwork reduction, better teamwork between general and special education, assessment, good learning environments, and stronger family relationships. The Secretary must support activities that include partnerships among colleges, schools, and local agencies; extra help for new special educators like mentoring and longer clinical experiences; programs to recruit and keep teachers (including from underrepresented groups); ways for paraprofessionals to become certified teachers; training for autism, Braille, interpreters, assistive technology, and other services for low-incidence disabilities; and graduate-level leadership training. Applicants must show their plans match state needs and cooperate with state or local education agencies. Only programs that meet state and professional standards for degree programs may get funds, and some institutions may be preferred, such as those with at least 25% minority enrollment. Grants may include scholarships that require recipients to work in the field for 2 years for each year of scholarship or repay the money, though the Secretary can reduce or waive this if it blocks recruitment. The Secretary may use up to 0.5% of annual funds to enforce service agreements. Money is authorized as needed for fiscal years 2005 through 2010.
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Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1462
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73