Title 20 › Chapter 33— EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter IV— NATIONAL ACTIVITIES TO IMPROVE EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › Part B— Personnel Preparation, Technical Assistance, Model Demonstration Projects, and Dissemination of Information › § 1462
The Secretary will award competitive grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements to groups that train and support people who work with infants, toddlers, and children with disabilities. Funded projects must help meet state needs for qualified staff and give those staff skills that are based on research. Projects should strengthen academic teaching, make sure regular teachers can teach students with disabilities in regular classrooms, and make sure special education teachers meet required qualifications. Training must cover new technology, early intervention and transition services, how to involve parents, and positive behavioral supports. The program also must provide high-quality professional development for principals, superintendents, and other school leaders in things like instructional leadership, behavior supports, reducing paperwork, better collaboration between general and special educators, assessment and accountability, and building good learning environments and parent relationships. Grants must support preparing special and regular teachers, related services staff, and leaders, and give extra help to beginning special educators. The Secretary will fund activities such as improving or creating college–school partnerships, longer clinical experiences for teacher candidates, mentoring and induction, new recruitment and retention models, pathways for paraprofessionals to become teachers, and training for low-incidence disabilities (for example, visual, hearing, or severe cognitive impairments), including Braille and assistive technology and preparing educational interpreters. Applicants must show their projects meet state needs and work with State or local education agencies. The Secretary may include scholarships with stipends. Scholarship recipients must agree to work in the field for 2 years for each scholarship year or repay funds, unless the Secretary reduces or waives that rule. The Secretary can use up to 0.5 percent of the program funds each year to enforce these rules. Funds are authorized as needed for fiscal years 2005 through 2010.
Full Legal Text
Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1462
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60