Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 70— - STRENGTHENING AND IMPROVEMENT OF ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - IMPROVING THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE DISADVANTAGED › Part Part B— - State Assessment Grants › § 6361
The Secretary of Education must give grants to State education agencies, using money made available under the program, so states can develop, run, or improve academic tests and related work. States can use the money to help create standards and tests (alone or with other states), to give and score tests, or to do many related tasks. These tasks include helping English learners and students with disabilities take regular tests, making tests valid and aligned with standards and classrooms, building a mix of end‑of‑year, interim, and classroom checks, measuring student growth, improving science tests (including optional engineering design), creating alternate tests for students with significant cognitive disabilities using universal design, working with colleges or researchers, using multiple sources to measure achievement, and building performance or tech‑based tests. States may design easier‑to‑read report cards that show student groups as long as no student can be identified and the data come from existing state or local reports. That design cannot force states to send new data to the Department of Education unless another law already allows it. Any state that gets a grant must send the Secretary one yearly report describing what it did with the money and what happened.
Full Legal Text
Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 6361
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73