Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 108 Part 5.djvu/106

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

108 STAT. 3596 PUBLIC LAW 103-382—OCT. 20, 1994 20 USC 6435. "SEC. 1415. USE OF FUNDS. "(a) IN GENERAL.— "(1) USES.— ^A State agency shall use funds received under this subpart only for programs and projects that— "(A) are consistent with the State plan under section 1414(a); and "(B) concentrate on providing participants with the knowledge and skills needed to make a successful transition to secondary school completion, further education, or employment. "(2) PROGRAMS AND PROJECTS. —Such programs and projects— "(A) may include the acquisition of equipment; "(B) shall be designed to support educational services that— "(i) except for institution-wide projects under section 1416, are provided to children identified by the State agency as failing, or most at risk of failing, to meet the State's challenging State content standards and challenging State student performance standards; "(ii) supplement and improve the quality of the educational services provided to such children by the State agency; and "(iii) afford such children an opportunity to learn to such challenging State standards; "(C) shall be carried out in a manner consistent with section 1120A and part F of this title; and "(D) may include the costs of meeting the evaluation requirements of section 14701. "(b) SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.^A program under this subpart that supplements the number of hours of instruction students receive from State and local sources shall be considered to comply with the supplement, not supplant requirement of section 1120A without regard to the subject areas in which instruction is given during those hours. 20 USC 6436. "SEC. 1416. INSTrrUTION-WTOE PROJECTS. "A State agency that provides free public education for children and youth in an institution for neglected or delinquent children (other than an adult correctional institution) or attending a community-day program for such children may use funds received under this part to serve all children in, and upgrade the entire educationed effort of, that institution or program if the State agency has developed, and the State educational agency has approved, a comprehensive plan for that institution or program that— "(1) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the educational needs of all youth in the institution or program serving juveniles; "(2) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the educational needs of youth aged 20 and younger in adult facilities who are expected to complete incarceration within a two-year period; "(3) describes the steps the State agency has taken, or will take, to provide all children under age 21 with the opportunity to meet challenging State content standards and challenging State student performance standards in order to improve the likelihood that the students will complete second-