Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 78— - SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, MATHEMATICS, AND CRITICAL FOREIGN LANGUAGE EDUCATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - ALIGNMENT OF EDUCATION PROGRAMS › § 9871
Provides competitive grants to states to do two things: make high school graduation rules match what colleges, the 21st‑century workforce, and the Armed Forces need, and build or improve a statewide P–16 education data system. P–16 education means preschool through a bachelor’s degree. Grants last no more than 3 years and a state may get only one. Each state must work with a statewide partnership that includes the Governor (or designee), leaders from public higher education, early childhood programs, a community college, a technical school, public elementary and secondary teachers, the chief state school officer, the state higher education coordinating official, an early childhood educator, a business representative, and a member of the Armed Forces. Other people or groups may join too. For alignment grants, states must use the money to find the exact skills and knowledge students need (based on input from colleges, employers, and the Armed Forces); change graduation requirements, standards, and tests to match those needs; bring together stakeholders to discuss big education issues; and make sure students are enrolled in rigorous courses, including by naming courses and performance levels needed for college entry. States may also use funds for teacher training, earlier-grade standards, remediation plans, teacher certification issues, and adding 21st‑century skills like critical thinking and communication. For data system grants, states must create a longitudinal P–16 system with a unique student identifier that does not reveal identity, keeps privacy under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, limits who can use the data and why, requires data‑use agreements for non‑government parties, keeps logs of disclosures, and keeps data secure. The system must include student enrollment, demographics, transfers, test records, teacher‑to‑student links, transcripts, college‑readiness scores, and postsecondary transition data. States must use the data to find what helps students succeed without remedial courses and to boost low‑income and minority students’ readiness. Applications must explain the plan, show stakeholder representation, describe privacy protections, and promise to keep funding the system after the grant ends. Grant funds must supplement, not replace, other funds, and states must provide non‑Federal matching funds equal to 100 percent of the grant. The Secretary must issue rules about identifier use within 180 days after August 9, 2007. The law authorizes $120,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2011 and 2012.
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20 U.S.C. § 9871
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73