Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 105— - COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - HEAD START PROGRAMS › § 9843a
The Secretary must make sure each center-based Head Start classroom has one teacher who can plan and run learning activities, keep children safe and healthy, help with social and emotional growth, and involve families. By September 30, 2013, at least 50 percent of Head Start teachers in centers must have a bachelor’s or higher degree in early childhood education or a bachelor’s plus equivalent coursework and preschool teaching experience. Education coordinators must be able to coach teachers and must have the same kinds of degrees or coursework. Teaching assistants must have a child development associate (CDA) credential, be enrolled in an associate or bachelor’s program, or be enrolled in a CDA program to finish within 2 years. Head Start agencies must report each year on progress and the numbers and percentages of staff who meet these goals; the Secretary will summarize those reports and send them to the Committee on Education and Labor of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate. References to Head Start agencies do not include Early Head Start. For classrooms that do not meet the 2013 teacher degree goal, the law sets earlier qualification options through specified dates: through September 30, 2011 there are several acceptable credentials or degrees (including CDA, state preschool certificates, associate degrees, or certain Teach For America teachers); as of October 1, 2011 the acceptable options narrowed to associate degrees or the Teach For America route. The Secretary may grant a 180-day waiver through September 30, 2011, or a 3-year waiver as of October 1, 2011, when an agency shows it tried to hire qualified people and meets minimum classroom credential rules. Each Head Start teacher must get at least 15 clock hours of quality professional development each year that is classroom-focused and evaluated for effectiveness. People who get federal help to earn a required degree must work in Head Start for at least 3 years afterward or repay the aid partly or in full. Any federal funds used must pay for degrees from colleges defined in sections 1001 or 1002 of Title 20. The Secretary will support mentor teacher roles by offering training, giving help to programs with many new staff, encouraging promotions from within, and promoting model mentor curricula. The Secretary will also review and improve rules for family service staff, caseloads, curricula, and a national credential and will support methods for special groups like limited English learners. A competitive Head Start Fellowship program may be created to give staff learning opportunities for 1 year (renewable once), with up to $1,000,000 a year for stipends and expenses; fellows are usually not Federal employees but have certain protections and must follow rules where assigned. The Secretary must write rules to run these programs. Within 1 year after May 18, 1994, model staffing plans were to be developed. Local agencies must make and review professional development plans for full-time staff and, before hiring, must interview applicants, check references, and get required criminal background checks covering the places the agency serves.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 9843a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73