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 4— national technical assistance center; coordinating center › § 1140q
The Secretary must use money from section 1140r to fund a National Center for Information and Technical Support for Postsecondary Students with Disabilities. The Department office that runs other college programs will manage it. Eligible groups to run the center are colleges, nonprofits, or partnerships with proven experience helping students with disabilities, making information accessible, working with different kinds of colleges, and on the topics of related grant programs. The National Center must give students and families help with planning for college, working with IEP teams and outreach programs, available supports and accommodations, mentoring, and transition programs. It must help college faculty and staff by sharing best practices, creating training modules and online tutorials, and improving retention and completion for students with disabilities. The Center must build or update a public, accessible website and database about campus disability services (covering things like documentation rules, support services, financial aid links, accommodation policies, and accessible materials). It must work with experts, hire staff with training experience, and produce a report to the Secretary and authorizing committees three years after it starts and every two years after that with data, evaluations, recommendations, and proven strategies. Using money from section 1140r, the Secretary must also competitively fund a coordinating center for inclusive transition and postsecondary programs for students with intellectual disabilities. Eligible groups are those with expertise in higher education, intellectual disability education, program development, and evaluation. The Secretary will fund the cooperative agreement for five years. The coordinating center must give technical help, set and evaluate standards, create evaluation methods for student outcomes (academic, social, independent living, employment), help programs award meaningful credentials, recommend program components and funding approaches, make model agreements for partners, run outreach and annual meetings, form a workgroup of experts to recommend accreditation-ready criteria, and report its work to the Secretary and committees within five years.
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Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1140q
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60