Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION › § 1862n–1
The Director must run the Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program to give competitive grants to colleges and college consortia. Grants pay for scholarships to STEM undergraduates and stipends to STEM professionals who train to become math and science teachers. Grant programs must include scholarships or stipends, STEM courses, early and clinical teaching practice, mentoring or programs before and after graduation to help new teachers meet service rules, and summer internships for freshmen and sophomores (including research at national labs and NASA). Colleges must put STEM and education faculty in charge and may use master teachers. The program must reach many types of schools, including outreach to historically Black colleges and universities, minority institutions, and veteran-serving programs. Grant money must add to, not replace, other federal or state funds. Applicants must describe their program, number of awards, partnerships with schools, and how they will track recipients. Scholarships go to STEM majors with at least junior standing and are mainly awarded for academic merit while considering need and priority groups. The Director sets yearly scholarship and stipend amounts, which must be at least $10,000. Full-time scholarships can last up to 3 years (part-time prorated up to 6). Scholarship recipients must teach 2 years for each full-year award, up to 6 years, within 8 years after graduation, in a high-need local educational agency. Stipend recipients may get up to 1 year of support (prorated if part-time) and must teach 2 years within 4 years after finishing the program. Recipients sign agreements, must report employment yearly, and may have to repay awards if they fail school, leave, or do not meet service rules; repayment rules vary by when the failure happens. The Director can accept private donations to add support. Not later than 4 years after August 9, 2007, the Director must report program results to Congress and must do an evaluation not less than 2 years after that date. Key defined terms in one line each: “cost of attendance” — same meaning as in the Higher Education Act; “eligible entity” — an institution of higher education or one acting for a consortium; “fellowship” — an award under a related section; “high need local educational agency” — as defined in the Higher Education Act; “mathematics and science teacher” — a K–12 teacher of STEM or computer science/AI including cybersecurity; “scholarship” — the award type for students; “science, technology, engineering, or mathematics professional” — a person with a bachelor’s, master’s, or doctoral STEM or computer science degree who works or worked in the field; “stipend” — the award type for professionals.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1862n–1
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73