Title 38Veterans' BenefitsRelease 119-73

§7902 Scholarship program

Title 38 › Part PART V— - BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter CHAPTER 79— - INFORMATION SECURITY EDUCATION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM › § 7902

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Secretary may create a scholarship program that pays money to people pursuing a doctoral degree in computer science or in electrical or computer engineering at an accredited school, as long as they sign an agreement to work for the Department afterward. The scholarship can last up to five years unless the Secretary approves a longer period. The recipient must keep making satisfactory academic progress, and the required period of work must be at least as long as the years the Secretary paid for the degree. The scholarship will pay the student’s tuition and fees and $1,500 a month for books, lab costs, and room and board (including months between terms or when doing research). Help cannot exceed $50,000 in one academic year or $200,000 in total. The money does not count as income for federal benefit programs. If a recipient fails to meet the work agreement, they must repay the unearned portion unless the Secretary allows an exception. The Secretary can set repayment rules, grant waivers or suspensions for good reasons, and offer paid internships that do not count toward the work service time. Students receiving certain other federal education payments cannot get this scholarship for those same months.

Full Legal Text

Title 38, §7902

Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)(1)Subject to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary may establish a scholarship program under which the Secretary shall, subject to subsection (d), provide financial assistance in accordance with this section to a qualified person—
(A)who is pursuing a doctoral degree in computer science or electrical or computer engineering at an accredited institution of higher education; and
(B)who enters into an agreement with the Secretary as described in subsection (b).
(2)(A)Except as provided in subparagraph (B), the Secretary may provide financial assistance under this section to an individual for up to five years.
(B)The Secretary may waive the limitation under subparagraph (A) if the Secretary determines that such a waiver is appropriate.
(b)(1)To receive financial assistance under this section an individual shall enter into an agreement to accept and continue employment in the Department for the period of obligated service determined under paragraph (2).
(2)For the purposes of this subsection, the period of obligated service for a recipient of financial assistance under this section shall be the period determined by the Secretary as being appropriate to obtain adequate service in exchange for the financial assistance and otherwise to achieve the goals set forth in section 7901(a) of this title. In no event may the period of service required of a recipient be less than the period equal to the total period of pursuit of a degree for which the Secretary agrees to provide the recipient with financial assistance under this section. The period of obligated service is in addition to any other period for which the recipient is obligated to serve on active duty or in the civil service, as the case may be.
(3)An agreement entered into under this section by a person pursuing a doctoral degree shall include terms that provide the following:
(A)That the period of obligated service begins on a date after the award of the degree that is determined under the regulations prescribed under section 7906 of this title.
(B)That the individual will maintain satisfactory academic progress, as determined in accordance with those regulations, and that failure to maintain such progress constitutes grounds for termination of the financial assistance for the individual under this section.
(C)Any other terms and conditions that the Secretary determines appropriate for carrying out this section.
(c)(1)The amount of the financial assistance provided for an individual under this section shall be the amount determined by the Secretary as being necessary to pay—
(A)the tuition and fees of the individual; and
(B)$1,500 to the individual each month (including a month between academic semesters or terms leading to the degree for which such assistance is provided or during which the individual is not enrolled in a course of education but is pursuing independent research leading to such degree) for books, laboratory expenses, and expenses of room and board.
(2)In no case may the amount of assistance provided for an individual under this section for an academic year exceed $50,000.
(3)In no case may the total amount of assistance provided for an individual under this section exceed $200,000.
(4)Notwithstanding any other provision of law, financial assistance paid an individual under this section shall not be considered as income or resources in determining eligibility for, or the amount of benefits under, any Federal or federally assisted program.
(d)(1)An individual who receives financial assistance under this section shall repay to the Secretary an amount equal to the unearned portion of the financial assistance if the individual fails to satisfy the requirements of the service agreement entered into under subsection (b), except in circumstances authorized by the Secretary.
(2)The Secretary may establish, by regulations, procedures for determining the amount of the repayment required under this subsection and the circumstances under which an exception to the required repayment may be granted.
(3)An obligation to repay the Secretary under this subsection is, for all purposes, a debt owed the United States. A discharge in bankruptcy under title 11 does not discharge a person from such debt if the discharge order is entered less than five years after the date of the termination of the agreement or contract on which the debt is based.
(e)The Secretary shall prescribe regulations providing for the waiver or suspension of any obligation of an individual for service or payment under this section (or an agreement under this section) whenever noncompliance by the individual is due to circumstances beyond the control of the individual or whenever the Secretary determines that the waiver or suspension of compliance is in the best interest of the United States.
(f)(1)The Secretary may offer a compensated internship to an individual for whom financial assistance is provided under this section during a period between academic semesters or terms leading to the degree for which such assistance is provided. Compensation provided for such an internship shall be in addition to the financial assistance provided under this section.
(2)An internship under this subsection shall not be counted toward satisfying a period of obligated service under this section.
(g)An individual who receives a payment of educational assistance under chapter 30, 31, 32, 34, or 35 of this title or chapter 1606 or 1607 of title 10 for a month in which the individual is enrolled in a course of education leading to a doctoral degree in information security is not eligible to receive financial assistance under this section for that month.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

Pub. L. 109–461, title IX, § 903(c), Dec. 22, 2006, 120 Stat. 3464, provided that: “Section 7902 of title 38, United States Code, as added by subsection (a), may only apply with respect to financial assistance provided for an academic semester or term that begins on or after August 1, 2007.”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

38 U.S.C. § 7902

Title 38Veterans' Benefits

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73