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 › § 1464
The U.S. Secretary of Education must have the Institute of Education Sciences handle most of the studies and evaluations about special education. The Secretary will also run or fund competitive studies to check how well states and local school districts are giving students with disabilities the education and services they need for free and providing early help to infants and toddlers who need it. The Secretary must do a national review to see if the law is working. That review must tell the President, Congress, states, school districts, and the public how to do better and help lawmakers improve the law. It looks at things like student achievement, which programs work best, teacher training, inclusion in regular classes, transitions at key ages, serving students in the least restrictive settings, preventing dropouts, reading and literacy, overidentifying students as disabled, parent involvement, and resolving disputes. An interim report was due 3 years after December 3, 2004, and a final report 5 years after that date. The Secretary must also study alternate assessments (who takes them, whether they are valid, and how they match state standards in reading, math, and science), send Congress an annual summary of research and state data, fund objective studies on impact and needs (including minority student outcomes and long-term studies of ages 3–17 and 18–21), and report to Congress on certain state policies in section 1435(c)(1).
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20 U.S.C. § 1464
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73