[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 34, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 34CFR400.4]

[Page 8-15]
 
                           TITLE 34--EDUCATION
 
  CHAPTER IV--OFFICE OF VOCATIONAL AND ADULT EDUCATION, DEPARTMENT OF 
                                EDUCATION
 
PART 400--VOCATIONAL AND APPLIED TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION PROGRAMS--GENERAL 
PROVISIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 400.4  What definitions apply to the Vocational and Applied Technology 
Education Programs?

    (a) Definitions in EDGAR. The following terms used in regulations 
for the Vocational and Applied Technology Education Programs are defined 
in 34 CFR 77.1:

Acquisition
Applicant
Application
Award
Budget
Contract
Department
EDGAR
Elementary school
Facilities
Federally recognized Indian tribal government
Fiscal year
Grant
Grantee
Grant period
Nonprofit
Private
Project
Public
Recipient
Secondary school
Secretary
State educational agency
Subgrant
Subgrantee
Supplies

    (b) Other definitions. The following definitions also apply to the 
regulations for Vocational and Applied Technology Education Programs.
    Act means the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied Technology 
Education Act (20 U.S.C. 2301 et seq.), as amended by Public Law 101-
392, 104 Stat. 753 (1990), and Public Law 102-103, 105 Stat. 497 (1991), 
unless otherwise indicated.

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    Administration means activities of a State necessary for the proper 
and efficient performance of its duties under the Act, including 
supervision, but not including curriculum development activities, 
personnel development, or research activities.
    All aspects of an industry includes, with respect to a particular 
industry that a student is preparing to enter, planning, management, 
finances, technical and production skills, underlying principles of 
technology, labor and community issues, health and safety, and 
environmental issues related to that industry.
    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 or ADA mean the Act in 42 
U.S.C. 12101 et seq.
    Apprenticeship training program means a program registered with the 
Department of Labor or the State apprenticeship agency in accordance 
with the Act of August 16, 1937, known as the National Apprenticeship 
Act (29 U.S.C. 50), that is conducted or sponsored by an employer, a 
group of employers, or a joint apprenticeship committee representing 
both employers and a union, and that contains all terms and conditions 
for the qualification, recruitment, selection, employment, and training 
of apprentices.
    Area vocational education school means--
    (1) A specialized high school used exclusively or principally for 
the provision of vocational education to individuals who are available 
for study in preparation for entering the labor market;
    (2) The department of a high school exclusively or principally used 
for providing vocational education in not less than five different 
occupational fields to individuals who are available for study in 
preparation for entering the labor market;
    (3) A technical institute or vocational school used exclusively or 
principally for the provision of vocational education to individuals who 
have completed or left high school and who are available for study in 
preparation for entering the labor market; or
    (4) The department or division of a junior college, community 
college, or university that operates under the policies of the State 
board and provides vocational education in not less than five different 
occupational fields leading to immediate employment but not necessarily 
leading to a baccalaureate degree, if, in the case of a school, 
department, or division described in paragraph (3) of this definition or 
in this paragraph, it admits as regular students both individuals who 
have completed high school and individuals who have left high school.
    Career guidance and counseling means programs that--
    (1) Pertain to the body of subject matter and related techniques and 
methods organized for the development in individuals of career 
awareness, career planning, career decision-making, placement skills, 
and knowledge and understanding of local, State, and national 
occupational, educational, and labor market needs, trends, and 
opportunities; and
    (2) Assist those individuals in making and implementing informed 
educational and occupational choices.
    Chapter 1 means chapter 1 of title I of the Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act of 1965, as amended (20 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.).
    Coherent sequence of courses means a series of courses in which 
vocational and academic education are integrated, and which directly 
relates to, and leads to, both academic and occupational competencies. 
The term includes competency-based education, academic education, and 
adult training or retraining, including sequential units encompassed 
within a single adult retraining course, that otherwise meet the 
requirements of this definition.
    Community-based organization means a private nonprofit organization 
of demonstrated effectiveness that is representative of communities or 
significant segments of communities and that provides job training 
services (for example, Opportunities Industrialization Centers, the 
National Urban League, SER-Jobs for Progress, United Way of America, 
Mainstream, the National Puerto Rican Forum, National Council of La 
Raza, WAVE, Inc., Jobs for Youth, organizations operating career intern 
programs, neighborhood groups and organizations, community action

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agencies, community development corporations, vocational rehabilitation 
organizations, rehabilitation facilities (as defined in section 7(10) of 
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 706(10)), agencies serving 
youth, agencies serving individuals with disabilities, including 
disabled veterans, agencies serving displaced homemakers, union-related 
organizations, and employer-related nonprofit organizations), and an 
organization of demonstrated effectiveness serving non-reservation 
Indians (including the National Urban Indian Council), as well as tribal 
governments and Native Alaskan groups.


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 2471(6); 41 U.S.C. 1503(5))

    Construction includes construction of new buildings and acquisition, 
expansion, remodeling, and alteration of existing buildings, and 
includes site grading and improvement and architect fees.
    Cooperative education means a method of instruction of vocational 
education for individuals who, through written cooperative arrangements 
between the school and employers, receive instruction, including 
required academic courses and related vocational instruction by 
alternation of study in school with a job in any occupational field. The 
two experiences must be planned and supervised by the school and 
employers so that each contributes to the student's education and 
employability. Work periods and school attendance may be on alternate 
half days, full days, weeks, or other periods of time in fulfilling the 
cooperative program.
    Criminal offender means any individual who is charged with, or 
convicted of, any criminal offense, including a youth offender or a 
juvenile offender.
    Correctional institution means any--
    (1) Prison;
    (2) Jail;
    (3) Reformatory;
    (4) Work farm;
    (5) Detention center; or
    (6) Halfway house, community-based rehabilitation center, or any 
other similar institution designed for the confinement or rehabilitation 
of criminal offenders.
    Curriculum materials means instructional and related or supportive 
material, including materials using advanced learning technology, in any 
occupational field that is designed to strengthen the academic 
foundation and prepare individuals for employment at the entry level or 
to upgrade occupational competencies of those previously or presently 
employed in any occupational field, and appropriate counseling and 
guidance material.
    Disadvantaged refers to individuals (other than individuals with 
disabilities) who have economic or academic disadvantages and who 
require special services and assistance in order to enable these 
individuals to succeed in vocational education programs. This term 
includes individuals who are members of economically disadvantaged 
families, migrants, individuals of limited English proficiency, and 
individuals who are dropouts from, or who are identified as potential 
dropouts from, secondary school. For the purpose of this definition, an 
individual who scores at or below the 25th percentile on a standardized 
achievement or aptitude test, whose secondary school grades are below 
2.0 on a 4.0 scale (on which the grade ``A'' equals 4.0), or who fails 
to attain minimum academic competencies may be considered ``academically 
disadvantaged.'' The definition does not include individuals with 
learning disabilities.
    Displaced homemaker means an individual who--
    (1) Is an adult;
    (2) Has worked as an adult primarily without remuneration to care 
for the home and family, and for that reason has diminished marketable 
skills; and
    (3)(i) Has been dependent on public assistance or on the income of a 
relative but is no longer supported by that income;
    (ii) Is a parent whose youngest dependent child will become 
ineligible to receive assistance under part A of title IV of the Social 
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 601), Aid to Families with Dependent Children, 
within two years of the parent's application for assistance under the 
Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied Technology Education Act;
    (iii) Is unemployed or underemployed and is experiencing difficulty 
in obtaining any employment or suitable employment, as appropriate; or

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    (iv) Is described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this definition and 
is a criminal offender.
    Economically disadvantaged family or individual means a family or 
individual that is--
    (1) Eligible for any of the following:
    (i) The program for Aid to Families with Dependent Children under 
part A of title IV of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 601).
    (ii) Benefits under the Food Stamp Act of 1977 (7 U.S.C. 2011).
    (iii) To be counted for purposes of section 1005 of chapter 1 of 
title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as 
amended (chapter 1) (20 U.S.C. 2701).
    (iv) The free or reduced-price meals program under the National 
School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. 1751).
    Note to paragraph (1)(iv): The National School Lunch Act prohibits 
the identification of students by name. However, State and local 
projects may use the total number of students participating in a free or 
reduced-priced meals program to determine eligibility for projects, 
services, and activities under the Vocational and Applied Technology 
Education Programs.
    (v) Participation in programs assisted under title II of the JTPA.
    (2) In receipt of a Pell grant or assistance under a comparable 
State program of need-based financial assistance.
    (3) Determined by the Secretary to be low-income according to the 
latest available data from the Department of Commerce or the Department 
of Health and Human Services Poverty Guidelines.
    (4) Identified as low income according to other indices of economic 
status, including estimates of those indices, if a grantee demonstrates 
to the satisfaction of the Secretary that those indices are more 
representative of the number of economically disadvantaged students 
attending vocational education programs. The Secretary determines, on a 
case-by-case basis, whether other indices of economic status are more 
representative of the number of economically disadvantaged students 
attending vocational education programs, taking into consideration, for 
example, the statistical reliability of any data submitted by a grantee 
as well as the general acceptance of the indices by other agencies in 
the State or local area.


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 2341(d)(3))

    Eligible recipient means, except as otherwise provided, a local 
educational agency, an area vocational education school, an intermediate 
educational agency, a postsecondary educational institution, a State 
corrections educational agency, or an eligible institution as defined in 
34 CFR 403.117(a).
    General occupational skills means strong experience in, and 
understanding of, all aspects of an industry.
    High technology means state-of-the-art computer, microelectronic, 
hydraulic, pneumatic, laser, nuclear, chemical, telecommunication, and 
other technologies being used to enhance productivity in manufacturing, 
communication, transportation, agriculture, mining, energy, commercial, 
and similar economic activity, and to improve the provision of health 
care.
    IDEA means the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 
U.S.C. 1400 et seq.), formerly entitled ``Education of the Handicapped 
Act.''
    Individual with disabilities means any individual with any 
disability (as defined in section 3(2) of the Americans With 
Disabilities Act of 1990), which includes any individual who--
    (1) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
one or more of the major life activities of that individual;
    (2) Has a record of an impairment described in paragraph (1) of this 
definition; or
    (3) Is regarded as having an impairment described in paragraph (1) 
of this definition.
    Note: This definition necessarily includes any individual who has 
been evaluated under part B of the IDEA and determined to be an 
individual with a disability who is in need of special education and 
related services; and any individual who is considered disabled under 
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.


(Authority: 42 U.S.C. 12102(2))

    Individualized education program means a written statement for a 
disabled individual developed in accordance with sections 612(4) and 
614(a)(5) of

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the IDEA (20 U.S.C. 1412(4) and 1414(a)(5)).
    Institution of higher education. (1) The term means an educational 
institution in any State that--
    (i) Admits as regular students only persons having a certificate of 
graduation from a school providing secondary education, or the 
recognized equivalent of such a certificate;
    (ii) Is legally authorized within such State to provide a program of 
education beyond secondary education;
    (iii) Provides an educational program for which it awards a 
bachelor's degree or provides not less than a two-year program that is 
acceptable for full credit toward such a degree;
    (iv) Is a public or other nonprofit institution; and
    (v) Is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or 
association, or if not so accredited--
    (A) Is an institution with respect to which the Secretary has 
determined that there is satisfactory assurance, considering the 
resources available to the institution, the period of time, if any, 
during which it has operated, the effort it is making to meet 
accreditation standards, and the purpose for which this determination is 
being made, that the institution will meet the accreditation standards 
of such an agency or association within a reasonable time; or
    (B) Is an institution whose credits are accepted, on transfer, by 
not less than three institutions which are so accredited, for credit on 
the same basis as if transferred from an institution so accredited.
    (2) The term also includes--
    (i) Any school which provides not less than a one-year program of 
training to prepare students for gainful employment in a recognized 
occupation and that meets the provisions of paragraphs (1) (i), (ii), 
(iv), and (v) of this definition; and
    (ii) A public or nonprofit private educational institution in any 
State which, in lieu of the requirement in paragraph (1) of this 
definition, admits as regular students persons who are beyond the age of 
compulsory school attendance in the State in which the institution is 
located and who meet the requirements of section 484(d) of the Higher 
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1091(d)).


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1141(a))

    Intermediate educational agency means a combination of school 
districts or counties (those divisions of a State utilized by the 
Secretary of Commerce in compiling and reporting data regarding 
counties) as are recognized in a State as an administrative agency for 
that State's vocational or technical education schools or for vocational 
programs within its public elementary or secondary schools. This term 
includes any other public institution or agency having administrative 
control and direction over a public elementary or secondary school.


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 2891(5))

    JTPA means the Job Training Partnership Act (29 U.S.C. 1501 et 
seq.).
    Limited English proficiency, if used with reference to individuals, 
means individuals--
    (1)(i) Who were not born in the United States or whose native 
language is a language other than English;
    (ii) Who come from environments where a language other than English 
is dominant; or
    (iii) Who are American Indian and Alaska Natives and who come from 
environments where a language other than English has had a significant 
impact on their level of English language proficiency; and
    (2) Who by reason thereof, have sufficient difficulty speaking, 
reading, writing, or understanding the English language to deny those 
individuals the opportunity to learn successfully in classrooms where 
the language of instruction is English or to participate fully in our 
society.


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 3223(a)(1))

    Local educational agency means a board of education or other legally 
constituted local school authority having administrative control and 
direction of public elementary or secondary schools in a city, county, 
township, school district, or political subdivision in a State, or any 
other public educational

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institution or agency having administrative control and direction of a 
vocational education program. For the purposes of sections 114, 115, 
116, 117, and 240 of the Act (implemented at 34 CFR 403.31 (e) and (f), 
403.32(c)(3), 403.190, 403.191, 403.192, 403.201, 403.202, and 403.204), 
this term includes a State corrections educational agency.
    Measure means a description of an outcome.


(Authority: H.R. Rep. No. 41, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 13 (1989))

    Postsecondary educational institution means an institution legally 
authorized to provide postsecondary education within a State, a Bureau 
of Indian Affairs-controlled postsecondary institution, or any 
postsecondary educational institution operated by, or on behalf of, any 
Indian tribe that is eligible to contract with the Secretary of the 
Interior for the administration of programs under the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450) or under the 
Act of April 16, 1934 (25 U.S.C. 452).
    Preparatory services means services, programs, or activities 
designed to assist individuals who are not enrolled in vocational 
education programs in the selection of, or preparation for participation 
in, an appropriate vocational education training program. Preparatory 
services may include, but are not limited to--
    (1) Services, programs, or activities related to outreach to, or 
recruitment of, potential vocational education students;
    (2) Career counseling and personal counseling;
    (3) Vocational assessment and testing; and
    (4) Other appropriate services, programs, or activities.
    Private vocational training institution means a business or trade 
school, or technical institution or other technical or vocational 
school, in any State, that--
    (1) Admits as regular students only persons who have completed or 
left elementary or secondary school and who have the ability to benefit 
from the training offered by the institution;
    (2) Is legally authorized to provide, and provides within that 
State, a program of postsecondary vocational or technical education 
designed to fit individuals for useful employment in recognized 
occupations;
    (3) Has been in existence for two years or has been specially 
accredited by the Secretary as an institution meeting the other 
requirements of this definition; and
    (4) Is accredited--
    (i) By a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association 
listed by the Secretary;
    (ii) If the Secretary determines that there is no nationally 
recognized accrediting agency or association qualified to accredit 
schools of a particular category, by a State agency listed by the 
Secretary; or
    (iii) If the Secretary determines that there is no nationally 
recognized or State agency or association qualified to accredit schools 
of a particular category, by an advisory committee appointed by the 
Secretary and composed of persons specially qualified to evaluate 
training provided by schools of that category. The committee shall 
prescribe the standards of content, scope, and quality that must be met 
by those schools and shall also determine whether particular schools 
meet those standards.
    Program effectiveness panel means the panel of experts in the 
evaluation of education programs and in other areas of education, at 
least two-thirds of whom are not Federal employees, who are appointed by 
the Secretary, and who review and assign scores to programs according to 
the criteria in 34 CFR 786.12 or 787.12.
    Program year or academic year mean the twelve-month period during 
which a State operates its vocational education program (which is most 
generally a period beginning on July 1 and ending on the following June 
30).


(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1225(a))

    Rehabilitation Act of 1973 means the Act in 29 U.S.C. 701 et seq.
    School facilities means classrooms and related facilities, including 
initial equipment, and interests in lands on which the facilities are 
constructed. The term does not include any facility intended primarily 
for events for which

[[Page 14]]

admission is to be charged to the general public.
    Sequential course of study means an integrated series of courses 
that are directly related to the educational and occupational skills 
preparation of individuals for jobs, or preparation for postsecondary 
education.
    Single parent means an individual who--
    (1) Is unmarried or legally separated from a spouse; and
    (2)(i) Has a minor child or children for which the parent has either 
custody or joint custody; or
    (ii) Is pregnant.
    Small business means a for-profit enterprise employing 500 or fewer 
employees.
    Special populations refers to individuals with disabilities, 
educationally and economically disadvantaged individuals (including 
foster children), individuals of limited English proficiency, 
individuals who participate in programs designed to eliminate sex bias, 
and individuals in correctional institutions.
    Specific job training means training and education for skills 
required by an employer to provide the individual student with the 
ability to obtain employment and to adapt to the changing demands of the 
workplace.
    Spread means the degree to which--
    (1) Project activities and results are demonstrated to others;
    (2) Technical assistance is provided to others to help them 
replicate project activities and results;
    (3) Project activities and results are replicated at other sites; or
    (4) Information and material about or resulting from the project are 
disseminated.
    Standard means the level or rate of an outcome.


(Authority: H.R. Rep. No. 41, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 13 (1989))

    State means any of the 50 States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, 
the District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, the 
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and Palau (until the 
Compact of Free Association with Palau takes effect pursuant to section 
101(a) of Public Law 99-658 (48 U.S.C. 1681)).
    State board means a State board designated or created by State law 
as the sole State agency responsible for the administration of 
vocational education or for supervision of the administration of 
vocational education in the State.
    State corrections educational agency means the State agency or 
agencies responsible for carrying out corrections education programs in 
the State.
    State council means the State council on vocational education 
established in accordance with 34 CFR 403.17 through 403.19.
    Supplementary services means curriculum modification, equipment 
modification, classroom modification, supportive personnel, and 
instructional aids and devices.
    Technology education means an applied discipline designed to promote 
technological literacy that provides knowledge and understanding of the 
impacts of technology including its organizations, techniques, tools, 
and skills to solve practical problems and extend human capabilities in 
areas such as construction, manufacturing, communication, 
transportation, power, and energy.
    Transportability means the ease by which project activities and 
results may be replicated at other sites, such as through the 
development and use of guides or manuals that provide step-by-step 
directions for others to follow in order to initiate similar efforts and 
reproduce comparable results.
    Tribally controlled community college means an institution that 
receives assistance under the Tribally Controlled Community College 
Assistance Act of 1978 (25 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.) or the Navajo Community 
College Act (25 U.S.C. 640a).
    Vocational education means organized educational programs offering a 
sequence of courses or instruction in a sequence or aggregation of 
occupational competencies that are directly related to the preparation 
of individuals for paid or unpaid employment in current or emerging 
occupations requiring other than a baccalaureate or advanced degree. 
These programs must include competency-based applied learning that 
contributes to an individual's academic knowledge, higher-order

[[Page 15]]

reasoning and problem-solving skills, work attitudes, general 
employability skills, and the occupational-specific skills necessary for 
economic independence as a productive and contributing member of 
society. This term also includes applied technology education.
    Vocational student organizations means those organizations for 
individuals enrolled in vocational education programs that engage in 
activities as an integral part of the instructional program. These 
organizations may have State and national units that aggregate the work 
and purposes of instruction in vocational education at the local level.
    Wagner-Peyser Act means the Act in 29 U.S.C. 49 et seq.

(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 2471)