Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 44— - CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION ASSISTANCE TO THE STATES › Part Part C— - Local Provisions › § 2354
Local schools or other eligible education programs that want federal career and technical education (CTE) money must send a local application to the state agency that runs the program. The application must cover the same time period as the State plan. The state agency decides the application rules, but every application must include the results of a local needs assessment; details about CTE courses and activities (including at least one State‑approved program of study); how the needs assessment shaped those choices; any new programs the school will ask the State to approve; how students (including students with special needs) will learn about CTE options; plans to work with workforce partners to give career exploration, up‑to‑date job information, and counseling; ways to strengthen students’ academic and technical skills; steps to prepare and give equal access to special populations, to prevent discrimination, and to support nontraditional fields; plans for work‑based learning and employer partnerships; chances for students to earn college credit in high school; and how the school will help recruit, train, and keep qualified teachers and staff, including people from underrepresented groups. If gaps in outcomes exist, the application must explain how the school will close them and, if there is no meaningful progress before the third program year, what extra steps will be taken. To get funding, the school must do a thorough local needs assessment and include it in the application, and update it at least once every 2 years. The assessment must look at student performance (including special groups), whether programs are big and good enough and aligned with local or state job needs, progress in putting programs in place, staff recruitment and training, and efforts to ensure equal access. The school must involve a wide group of local partners—teachers and counselors, postsecondary faculty, workforce boards and employers, parents and students, representatives of special populations, agencies serving out‑of‑school or at‑risk youth, Tribal representatives when relevant, and any other required stakeholders—and keep consulting them regularly about program updates, labor market information, work‑based learning, and coordinated use of funds.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 2354
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73