Title 20 › Chapter 70— STRENGTHENING AND IMPROVEMENT OF ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS › Subchapter VI— INDIAN, NATIVE HAWAIIAN, AND ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION › Part A— Indian Education › Subpart 3— national activities › § 7457
Creates a program at the Department of Education to fund one or more Native American language resource centers. The Secretary can give grants or contracts to eligible groups to set up, strengthen, and run a center. Centers must be staffed by people with relevant experience, including speakers of American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian languages who have worked in language education at preschool, elementary, secondary, adult, or college levels. Centers must help build the ability to teach and learn Native American languages, support language use and revival, protect the right of Native people to use and develop their languages under the Native American Languages Act and the United States trust responsibility, address harms from past discrimination, and support using these languages to teach many ages and subjects. Centers may also help states and schools treat Native languages like other world languages for credit; develop assessments and outcome measures; help programs apply for federal funds; support teacher training and alternative certification; share promising practices and tech tools; create distance-learning resources and digital libraries (using materials provided by Native programs or communities); help build language-medium schools and programs; access international best practices; run intensive training like summer institutes; and do other work that supports the required goals. Eligible entities are colleges, units inside colleges with Native language expertise, or consortia that include them. Up to $3,000,000 is authorized each fiscal year to carry out the program.
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Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 7457
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60