Title 20 › Chapter 28— HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter VII— GRADUATE AND POSTSECONDARY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS › Part D— Programs To Provide Students With Disabilities With a Quality Higher Education › Subpart 1— demonstration projects to support postsecondary faculty, staff, and administrators in educating students with disabilities › § 1140b
The Secretary can use money from section 1140e to give out competitive grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements to colleges and universities. At least two of those awards must go to schools that train others and give technical help so students with learning disabilities can succeed in college. Each award can last up to three years. Grantees must use the money for things like creating better teaching methods (including universal design), helping students with disabilities move from high school to college, doing and sharing research and data, making distance learning accessible, training faculty in disability-related fields and offering related courses and counseling, providing training for staff at other colleges, and improving curriculum access. Winners must evaluate their work and share what they learn with other colleges. When choosing awards, the Secretary must consider geographic balance, urban and rural needs, different sizes and types of colleges, and schools with proven experience serving students with disabilities. The Secretary must also publish a report no later than one year after August 14, 2008 on grants from fiscal years 1999 through 2008, and another report within three years after the first grant awarded under this subpart after August 14, 2008 that reviews the projects and gives guidance on how to copy successful ones.
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20 U.S.C. § 1140b
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60