Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 70— - STRENGTHENING AND IMPROVEMENT OF ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - 21ST CENTURY SCHOOLS › Part Part C— - Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools › § 7221i
Names and meanings of key words used for the charter school program are explained here. An authorized public chartering agency is a state or local education agency or other public body that state law lets, and the Secretary approves, to authorize charter schools. A charter school is a public, tuition-free, nonreligious school created or converted under a state law that lets it operate with more flexibility; it is run under public oversight, follows federal civil-rights, disability, privacy, and special-education laws, meets health, safety, and audit rules, has a written performance contract describing how student results will be measured, admits students by choice and uses a lottery if too many apply (with a special rule for affiliated schools), and may include early childhood or postsecondary programs. A charter management organization is a nonprofit that runs a network of charter schools and provides central support. A charter school support organization is a statewide nonprofit (not an authorizer) that helps developers plan schools and gives technical help to operating schools. A developer is a person or group (including teachers, parents, school staff, or nonprofits) who starts a charter project. An eligible applicant is a developer who applied to an authorizer and gave proper, timely notice. To expand means to greatly increase enrollment or add one or more grades. A high-quality charter school meets state standards for strong academic results, has no major safety, financial, or compliance problems, and has proven it raises achievement and graduation for all students and for student subgroups unless numbers are too small or would reveal a student’s identity. To replicate means to open a new school or campus based on a high-quality school’s model under an existing or additional charter if state law allows.
Full Legal Text
Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 7221i
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73