Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part V— ACQUISITION › Subpart I— Defense Industrial Base › Chapter 384— MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY › § 4843
The Secretary of Defense must set up a program called the Manufacturing Engineering Education Program to give grants or other awards. The money can improve existing manufacturing engineering education or start new programs that help the Department of Defense. Grants can go to companies, nonprofits, colleges and universities, or groups made of those partners. The Secretary must work with the Secretary of Education, the National Science Foundation, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and other federal agencies. The program must fit with the Department’s advanced manufacturing work and try not to give all awards in one region. Funded programs must be one connected, multi-subject engineering education effort. They should include classroom and lab work, internships and coop jobs, faculty training, curriculum updates, workforce training, partnerships with industry and defense labs, and outreach to service members, veterans, and their families. The Secretary will ask for proposals, judge them by merit in competitive reviews, and pick projects that are innovative, backed by committed resources, involve U.S. industry, engage students with real work, hire qualified teachers, plan to be self-supporting within three years, recruit women and underrepresented groups, and teach advanced and new manufacturing technologies. “Institution of higher education” means colleges and universities as defined in the Higher Education Act.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
10 U.S.C. § 4843
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60