Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 76— - EDUCATION RESEARCH, STATISTICS, EVALUATION, INFORMATION, AND DISSEMINATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - EDUCATION SCIENCES REFORM › Part Part D— - National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance › § 9564
Creates and runs a network of 10 regional educational laboratories to help schools and districts in different parts of the United States. The Director must hire organizations for the 10 regions (the same regions used under the older law as of the day before November 5, 2002). Money for each lab is set based on how many local school districts and school-age children are in the region and how much it costs to serve that area. Contracts last 5 years. The Director can hire research groups, colleges, state or local agencies, partnerships, or qualified individuals. Applicants must send an application and a 5-year plan that addresses the program priorities and the needs of states and local districts in the region. Before awarding contracts, the Director must set clear goals and measurable indicators to judge progress. The Evaluation and Regional Assistance Commissioner must share information across labs, oversee a strategic plan to increase collaboration and reduce duplicated work, make sure lab work can support national needs when appropriate, and set up peer review to keep research quality high. Each lab must do applied research, develop useful products, share proven practices widely (including online), and give training and technical help to state and local education agencies, schools, teachers, parents, and librarians. Work must cover topics like teaching methods, assessments, math, science, reading, English learners, education technology, and professional development. Labs must check regional needs regularly, hold public hearings, help low-performing or high-poverty schools, study school finance and administration, and work with other federal technical assistance providers. Each lab must have a governing board made up of state and regional representatives, including each State’s chief school officer or designee, and other stakeholders; the board sets the lab’s mission, priorities, and quality standards. Boards may include up to 10 percent of members from other representatives if needed. Labs must join an information-sharing network, use the Department’s advance payment system, and send a plan and annual report by July 1 each year. The Commissioner will order an independent evaluation in the third year of a contract and send results to Congress and others. Labs can still get other Department of Education funds and do international work. The Director may also fund extra projects with a lab to help meet state education goals.
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Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 9564
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73