Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 70— - STRENGTHENING AND IMPROVEMENT OF ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VIII— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › Part Part F— - Uniform Provisions › Subpart subpart 2— - other provisions › § 7907
Federal officials and federal money must not make a state, school district, or school use a certain curriculum, program, or how to spend local money, or force them to pay costs that the federal program does not cover. The Department may not use funds under this law to create, approve, require, or support any K–12 curriculum, including the Common Core State Standards developed under the Common Core State Standards Initiative or other standards used by many states. The law also does not let federal workers control instructional content, does not change the General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1221 et seq.), does not require false medical or scientific materials or ban true ones, and does not create a legal right people can enforce. States do not have to get federal approval of their academic standards to receive these funds. Schools may use the money for content, standards, tests, curriculum, or programs they choose under state and local law, as long as they follow the grant or contract. The law does not require national school building standards.
Full Legal Text
Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 7907
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73