Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 129— - NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE STATE GRANT PROGRAM › Part Part III— - Innovative and Community-Based Service-Learning Programs and Research › § 12563
Provides money for groups to run service-learning programs and do related research. It defines key terms: an "eligible entity" is a school, college, tribe, state agency, nonprofit, community group, or similar organization; an "eligible partnership" must include successful community-based service-learning groups and a local school agency that serves many low-income students and has a four-year graduation rate under 70 percent; a "youth engagement zone" is the area where a program happens; a "youth engagement zone program" is a coordinated school- or community-based service-learning effort that tackles a community problem, reaches more out-of-school youth and secondary students, and either gets at least 90 percent of those students involved or makes service-learning part of every secondary school’s curriculum. Grants and fixed-amount awards may fund many kinds of programs, such as adding service-learning to STEM classes with STEM professionals, energy conservation projects, emergency preparedness, improving access to computers and technology (including for people with disabilities and in low-income or rural areas), high-school mentoring of younger students, research and evaluations, innovative projects, summer of service programs (prioritizing youth entering grades 6–9, for youth entering grades 6–12, community projects that are structured and supervised, and a $500 or $750 award for students who complete 100 service hours), youth engagement zone programs to involve all students and improve attendance, behavior, achievement and graduation, and semester-of-service programs that give at least 70 hours per semester (one-third in the field), target disadvantaged students, can give academic credit equal to similar classes, and fit into the school’s curriculum. To get funds, an entity or partnership must apply and be approved. The program period is 3 years (which can include a planning year) and may be extended one year if performance goals are met. The Corporation must give priority to projects that involve students and community members in planning, serve low-income or rural areas, and use adult volunteers including retirees. The Corporation must, within 4 years after the Serve America Act took effect, do an independent evaluation of these programs, identify best practices, and share the results widely.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 12563
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73