Title 20 › Chapter 48— DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION › Subchapter II— ESTABLISHMENT OF THE DEPARTMENT › § 3412
The Department must have a Deputy Secretary of Education, picked by the President and approved by the Senate. The Deputy Secretary acts as Secretary when the Secretary is away, sick, or the job is empty. The Secretary names who else will step in if both the Secretary and Deputy are gone. The Deputy is in charge of working with States and local school systems so the Department’s work supports and fits with their policies. Local school authorities can tell the Deputy about any conflicts between Department rules and rules from other Federal agencies. If a conflict is found, the Deputy must talk with the other agency and send a report with fixes. The Department must also have Assistant Secretaries for Elementary and Secondary Education; Postsecondary Education; Career, Technical, and Adult Education; Special Education and Rehabilitative Services; an Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights; and a General Counsel, all appointed by the President with Senate approval. The Secretary must appoint a Special Assistant for Gender Equity and a Liaison for Community and Junior Colleges (the Liaison had to be named within 6 months after July 23, 1992, and must have either an associate degree from a community/junior college or at least 5 years’ work there). The law also requires a Director of the Institute of Education Sciences (appointed under section 114(a) of the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002), an Inspector General (appointed under chapter 4 of title 5), and may include an Under Secretary. Four more officers must be appointed by the President with Senate approval (except the Assistant Secretary for Management, who does not need Senate approval). These officers handle things like relations with Congress, public information, parent and public participation, budgeting and management, planning and policy, and promoting foreign language and culture study. The President must tell the Senate what job duties each nominee will have, and each officer reports directly to the Secretary and does any extra tasks the Secretary assigns. The Assistant Secretary for Career, Technical, and Adult Education must also lead literacy program coordination and help work with other Federal agencies.
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Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 3412
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60