OPE: Office of Postsecondary Education
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Office of Postsecondary Education - Programs
OPE Program Guide


In this OPE Program Guide, we have organized OPE programs by their primary purpose. The guide provides a brief summary of the program and a link to the main program page. Follow the links below for the program descriptions. Follow the links found on the individual program pages for more detailed program information.

Helping All Americans Reach Postsecondary Education - OPE's support for higher education begins even before students enroll in postsecondary institutions. Students -- especially those who may become the first in their families to get a postsecondaryeducation -- need to plan early for college and get information, encouragement and academic support in preparing for higher education.

Improving Teaching at All Levels - Quality instruction is essential to student learning at all levels of education. Postsecondary institutions play an important role in training teachers for elementary and secondary schools. OPE's program on Teacher Quality addresses teacher education, while our Fulbright-Hays international programs support quality instruction at the postsecondary level by funding faculty research and educational experiences abroad.

Supporting Undergraduate Students - Once students are enrolled in postsecondary institutions, they may still need support in the form of special services in addition to financial aid to stay in school and succeed. Among the OPE programs addressing needs for special services are several TRIO programs and the Childcare Access Means Parents in School Program. The Byrd Honors Scholarship Program provides financial support for exceptional students.

Most Federal student aid is available through the Federal Pell Grant Program and the Federal Family Education Loans and Direct Loans Programs located in the Department of Education's Office of Federal Student Aid (OFSA). Information about those programs can be obtained by calling 1-800-4FED AID/1-800-433-3243.

Supporting Graduate Students and Faculty - OPE's support for students continues through graduate school. Several programs provide funding, directly or through institutions of higher education, for graduate fellowships and research and educational experiences abroad.

Promoting Innovation and Technology in Education - Ensuring that America's students are the best-educated in the world requires postsecondary education institutions to be innovative, replicate educational approaches that work, and take advantage of new technologies that improve student learning. Several OPE programs support those requirements.

Strengthening International Education - Many OPE programs are designed to strengthen international education, including several that fund postsecondary institutions to teach students the language skills and knowledge they need to work effectively in today's international economy with the many nations who are our trading partners or competitors.

Improving Access to High Quality Education Through Institutional Development and Support - To ensure that every American has access to quality higher education, OPE's institutional development programs provide funds to build academic and administrative capacity at postsecondary institutions serving a large proportion of disadvantaged students.

Improving Access to High Quality Education Through Recognition of Agencies That Accredit Postsecondary Education - To ensure that every American has access to quality higher education, OPE staff and national committees evaluate agencies accrediting postsecondary institutions and programs and recognize those monitoring institutions and programs according to accepted standards and practices.

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Helping All Americans Reach Postsecondary Education

  • College Access Challenge Grant Program

    Description: Fosters partnerships among federal, state, and local governments and philanthropic organizations through matching challenge grants that are aimed at increasing the number of low-income students who are prepared to enter and succeed in postsecondary education.

    Potential Grantees: State Agencies

  • Educational Opportunity Centers

    Description: Funds centers to provide counseling and information on college admission and attendance to qualified adults who want to enter or continue a postsecondary education program. EOCs help participants apply to college and for financial aid.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public and private agencies or organizations, a combination of those, and in exceptional cases, secondary schools.

  • Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs (GEAR UP)

    Description: Provides grants to community-based partnerships and to states to encourage more young people to have high expectations, stay in school, study hard, and take the right courses to go to college.

    Potential Grantees: Community-based partnerships of at least one postsecondary institution, at least one school district acting on behalf of (one or more) middle schools and high schools in low-income communities, and at least two other public or private organizations; also, state agencies designated by a governor.

  • Talent Search

    Description: Funds projects to identify and assist individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds with the potential to succeed in higher education. Projects provide academic, career, and financial counseling and encourage participants to graduate from high school and go on to the postsecondary education institution of their choice. Talent Search projects also encourage high school dropouts to reenter the educational system and complete their education.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public and private agencies or organizations, a combination of those, and in exceptional cases, secondary schools.

  • Upward Bound

    Description: Funds projects to serve high school students from low-incomes families and from families in which neither parent has a four-year degree, as well as low-income, first-generation military veterans who are preparing for postsecondary education. All Upward Bound projects provide instruction in math, laboratory science, composition, literature and foreign language.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public and private agencies or organizations, a combination of those, and in exceptional cases, secondary schools.

  • Upward Bound Math-Science

    Description: Funds projects to strengthen the math and science skills of participating students from low-income families and from families in which neither parent has a four-year degree, as well as low-income, first-generation military veterans who are preparing for postsecondary education. The projects help participants recognize and develop their potential to excel in math and science and to pursue postsecondary degrees in those fields.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public and private organizations, a combination of those, and in exceptional cases, secondary schools.

  • Training Program for Federal TRIO Programs Staff

    Description: Provides funding to enhance the skills and expertise of project directors and staff employed in Federal TRIO programs. Training projects may include conferences, seminars, internships, workshops, or publication of manuals.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, and public or private nonprofit agencies or organizations.

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Improving Teaching at All Levels

  • Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants for States

    Description: Funds state efforts to improve the quality of their teaching force through comprehensive changes in state policies and practices for teacher preparation, licensure, certification, and professional development.

    Potential Grantees: State authorities responsible for teacher certification and preparation.

  • Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants for Recruitment

    Description: Funds efforts to recruit and prepare highly competent teachers for high-need local school districts by identifying and recruiting potential teachers and designing high-quality teacher preparation and induction programs tailored to the needs of the community and the teacher candidates.

    Potential Grantees: States as well as partnerships that include an institution of higher education’s teacher preparation program, its school of arts and sciences, and a local high-need school district.

  • Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants for Partnerships

    Description: Supports partnerships to improve student learning by bringing about fundamental change and improvement in the way teachers are prepared for service in local high-need school districts.

    Potential Grantees: Partnerships that include a higher education institution's teacher preparation program, its school of arts and science, and a local high-need school district.

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Supporting Undergraduate Students

  • Student Support Services

    Purpose: Funds academic, financial, and personal counseling as well as mentoring and tutoring to help eligible students stay in college and complete their programs. Eligible students are first-generation college students from low-income families or students with disabilities. This TRIO program may also provide grant aid to current SSS participants who have Federal Pell Grants.

    Potential grantees: Institutions of higher education, individually and in consortia.

  • McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement

    Description: Supports preparing undergraduate participants from disadvantaged backgrounds who demonstrate high academic potential for doctoral studies. It does this by involving them in research, scholarly activities and through counseling, mentoring, and tutoring for doctoral studies.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, individually and in consortia.

  • Child Care Access Means Parents in School

    Description: Supports the participation of low-income parents in postsecondary education by providing campus-based childcare services.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • B.J. Stupak Olympic Scholarships

    Description: Provides financial assistance to athletes training at the United States Olympic Education Center, or one of the United States Olympic Training Centers, who are pursuing a postsecondary education.

    Potential Grantees: United States Olympic Education Center or one of the United States Olympic Training Centers.

  • Robert C. Byrd Honors Scholarship

    Description: A Federally funded, state-administered program providing college scholarships to exceptionally able high school seniors who show promise for continued excellence in postsecondary education.

    Potential Grantees: State education agencies.

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Supporting Graduate Students and Faculty

  • Demonstration Projects to Ensure Quality Higher Education for Students with Disabilities

    Description: Supports technical assistance and professional development activities for faculty and administrators to improve their ability to provide a quality postsecondary education for students with disabilities.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need

    Description: Funds institutions of higher education to provide graduate fellowships in selected fields for students with excellent records who demonstrate financial need and who plan to pursue the highest degree available in their field.

    Potential Grantees: Academic departments and programs of institutions of higher education.

  • American Overseas Research Centers

    Description: Provides grants to establish or operate overseas research centers promoting postgraduate research, exchanges, and area studies.

    Potential Grantees: Consortia of institutions of higher education.

  • Jacob K. Javits Fellowships

    Description: Provides graduate fellowships to students of superior ability who demonstrate financial need and are pursuing the highest degree available in selected fields of the arts, humanities, and social sciences.

    Potential Grantees: Eligible students in graduate programs in selected fields of study.

  • Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships

    Description: Funds institutions of higher education to provide graduate (academic-year and summer) fellowships for acquiring combined competencies in foreign language and area or international studies.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Fulbright-Hays Training Grants--Faculty Research Abroad

    Description: Provides grants to support faculty maintaining and improving their area studies and language skills by conducting research abroad for periods of 3 to 12 months.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Fulbright-Hays Training Grants--Group Projects Abroad

    Description: Provides grants to support overseas projects in training, research, and curriculum development in modern foreign languages and area studies by teachers, students, or faculty engaged in a common endeavor. Projects may include short-term seminars, curriculum development, group research or study, or advanced intensive language programs.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, state education departments, private nonprofit education organizations, and consortia.

  • Fulbright-Hays Seminars Abroad--Bilateral Projects

    Description: Funds short-term study/travel seminars abroad for U.S. educators in the social sciences and humanities for the purpose of improving their understanding and knowledge of the peoples and cultures of other countries.

    Potential Grantees: Support is generally made available through interagency agreements to the State Department.

  • Fulbright-Hays Training Grant--Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad

    Description: Funds institutions of higher education to provide (6- to 12-month) grants to doctoral students doing dissertation research in other countries in modern foreign languages and area studies.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Thurgood Marshall Legal Educational Opportunity Program

    Description: Provides low-income, minority, or disadvantaged college students with information, counseling, and financial assistance for gaining access to and completing law school.

    Potential Grantee: Council on Legal Education Opportunity.

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Promoting Innovation and Technology in Education

  • Fund for the Improvement of Posecondary Education (FIPSE) Comprehensive Program

    Description: Provides grants to support and disseminate innovative reform projects promising to be models for improving the quality of postsecondary education and increasing student access.

    Potential Grantees: A wide range of non-profit providers of educational services.

  • TRIO Dissemination Partnership Program

    Description: Provides grants to partnerships to help postsecondary institutions without a TRIO project serving low-income and first-generation college students in replicating and adapting successful TRIO program components, practices, and activities.

    Potential Grantees: Partnerships of an institution of higher education or other organization with a TRIO project funded as of October 7, 1998, with an institution or agency serving TRIO-eligible populations having no TRIO projects.

  • Underground Railroad Educational and Cultural Program

    Description: Provides grants to support research, exhibition, interpretation, and collection of artifacts related to the history of the Underground Railroad through the use of partnerships, local and national electronic links, and satellite centers.

    Potential Grantees: Non-profit educational organizations established to promote the history of the Underground Railroad.

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Strengthening International Education

  • National Resource Centers

    Description: Provides grants to establish, strengthen, and operate centers of language and area/international studies serving as national resources for teaching modern foreign languages; providing instruction needed for full understanding of areas, regions, or countries; training and research in international studies; language aspects of professional and other fields of study; and instruction and research on world affairs.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, individually and in consortia.

  • Undergraduate International Studies and Foreign Language Program

    Description: Provides funds to plan, develop, and carry out programs to strengthen and improve undergraduate instruction in international studies and foreign languages.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, individually, in consortia, or in partnership with nonprofit educational organizations.

  • International Research and Studies

    Description: Supports surveys, studies, and development of instructional materials to improve and strengthen instruction in modern foreign languages, area studies, and other international fields.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public and private agencies, organizations, and individuals.

  • Business and International Education

    Description: Provides funds for institutions of higher education that enter into agreements with trade associations and/or businesses to improve the academic teaching of the business curriculum and to conduct outreach activities expanding the capacity of the business community to engage in international economic activities.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Centers for International Business Education

    Description: Provides funding to schools of business in institutions of higher education for curriculum development, research, and training on issues of importance to U.S. trade and competitiveness.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education.

  • Language Resource Centers

    Description: Provides grants for establishing, strengthening, and operating centers serving as resources for improving the nation's capacity for teaching and learning foreign languages through teacher training, research, materials development, and dissemination projects.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, individually or in consortia.

  • American Overseas Research Centers

    Description: provides grants to establish or operate overseas research centers that promote postgraduate research, exchanges, and area studies.

    Potential Grantees: Consortia of higher education institutions.

  • Institute for International Public Policy

    Description: Provides a single grant to assist a consortium of colleges and universities fund an institute dedicated to increasing the number of minorities in international service, including private international voluntary organizations and the U.S. Foreign Service.

    Potential Grantees: Consortia of institutions of higher education.

  • Technological Innovation and Cooperation for Foreign Information Access

    Description: Provides grants to develop innovative techniques or programs addressing national teaching and research needs in international education and foreign languages by using new electronic technologies to access, collect, organize, preserve, and widely disseminate information on world regions and countries other than the United States.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, public or nonprofit libraries, or combinations of institutions or libraries.

  • FIPSE Program for North American Mobility in Higher Education

    Description: Provides grants to promote exchanges of students within the context of multilateral curricular development in a wide range of academic and professional disciplines among Canada, Mexico, and the United States.

    Potential Grantees: Consortia of Canadian, Mexican, and U.S. institutions of higher education or combinations of institutions and other public and private nonprofit educational institutions and agencies.

  • FIPSE European Union-United States Atlantis Program

    Description: The program, jointly administered and funded by the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) and the European Commission's Directorate General for Education and Culture, provides grants for up to three years to add a European Community-United States dimension to international curriculum development and related student exchange.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, nonprofit organizations, other nonprofit organizations and/or agencies.

  • FIPSE United States-Russia Program

    Description: Provides grants to consortia of institutions of higher education to promote cooperation in education and science between the United States and Russia.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education, combinations of institutions of higher education, and other public and private nonprofit institutions and agencies.

  • FIPSE U.S.-Brazil Higher Education Consortia Program

    Description: Provides grants to foster the exchange of students and faculty within the context of bilateral curricular development between Brazil and the United states.

    Potential Grantees: Consortia of Brazilian and U.S. institutions of higher education and vocational and training institutions.

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Improving Access to High Quality Education Through Institutional Development and Support

  • Strengthening Institutions

    Description: Provides grants for improving and strengthening academic quality, management, and fiscal stability to increase the capacity to serve low-income students.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education serving a substantial proportion of students receiving Federal financial aid. Specific sums are also available for American Indian Tribally-Controlled Colleges and Universities and for Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian-Serving Institutions.

  • Strengthening Historically Black Colleges and Universities

    Description: Provides grants to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) for establishing or strengthening their physical plant, management capabilities, academic resources, and endowment-building capacity. Funds may be used for student services, educational equipment acquisition, facility construction, and faculty/staff development.

    Potential Grantees: Historically Black Colleges and Universities, as designated by law.

  • Developing Hispanic Serving Institutions

    Description: Provides funds for expanding the capacity of institutions of higher education to serve Hispanic and low-income students through faculty development, fiscal and administrative management, endowments, curriculum development, scientific or laboratory equipment for teaching, construction, renovation of instructional facilities, joint use of facilities, academic tutoring, counseling programs, and student support services.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education whose FTE enrollment is at least 25 percent Hispanic and 50 percent from low-income families.

  • Strengthening Historically Black Graduate Institutions

    Description: Awards grants to Historically Black Graduate Institutions for improving and strengthening academic quality, institutional management, access, and fiscal stability.

    Potential Grantees: Historically Black Graduate Institutions, as designated by law.

  • Minority Science and Engineering Improvement

    Description: Provides funds to foster long-range improvement in science and engineering education programs for minorities and increase the flow of underrepresented minorities, particularly minority women, into science and engineering careers.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education whose minority enrollment exceeds 50 percent; professional scientific societies; nonprofit science organizations; and non-minority institutions of higher education providing needed services to a group of eligible minority institutions.

  • Historically Black College and University Capital Financing Program

    Description: Provides low-cost capital for financing or refinancing the repair, renovation, and construction of classrooms, libraries, laboratories, dormitories, instructional equipment, and research instrumentation.

    Potential Applicants: Historically Black Colleges and Universities, as designated by law.

  • Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institution Program (CCRAA)

    Description: Supports institutions of education in their effort to increase their self-sufficiency by improving academic programs, institutional management, and fiscal stability.

    Potential Grantees: Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-serving institutions of higher education

  • Historically Black Colleges and Universities Program (CCRAA)

    Description: Provides financial assistance to establish or strengthen the academic resources, management capabilities, and physical plants of historically Black colleges and universities.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education legally designated as historically Black colleges and universities

  • Hispanic-Serving Institutions Program (CCRAA)

    Description: Expands educational opportunities for, and improves the academic attainment of Hispanic students and other low-income students.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education that qualify as eligible Hispanic-Serving Institutions

  • Native American-Serving Non-Tribal Institutions Program (CCRAA)

    Description: Supports institutions of education in their effort to increase their self-sufficiency by improving academic programs, institutional management, and fiscal stability.

    Potential Grantees: Native American-Serving Non-Tribal Institutions

  • Predominantly Black Institutions Program (CCRAA)

    Description: Supports the strengthening of predominantly Black institutions to carry out programs in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics; health education; internationalization or globalization; teacher preparation; or improving educational outcomes of African-American males.

    Potential Grantees: Institutions of higher education that meet the definition of a predominantly Black institution

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Improving Access to High Quality Education Through Recognition of Agencies That Accredit Postsecondary Education

  • Accreditation and State Liaison (ASL)

    Description: Administers for the Secretary of Education the process of recognizing agencies that accredit institutions of higher education. Postsecondary educational institutions must be accredited by an agency recognized by the Secretary to be eligible to participate in Title IV student aid programs authorized by the Higher Education Act and other Federal programs as designated by the sponsoring Federal agency. ASL also strengthens postsecondary accountability by facilitating communication among staff in the Department of Education, state regulatory agencies, accrediting agencies, guaranty agencies, and other stakeholders in postsecondary education.

  • National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity (NACIQI)

    Description: The NACIQI is a Federal advisory committee comprised of 15 members appointed by the Secretary of Education that is responsible for advising the Secretary on issues pertaining to the accreditation of postsecondary institutions and to the eligibility and certification process for those institutions to participate in Title IV student financial aid programs. The primary role of the NACIQI has been to provide recommendations to the Secretary concerning the recognition of accrediting agencies, state approval agencies for public postsecondary vocational education, and state approval agencies for nurse education that monitor the schools they accredit according to accepted standards and practices.

  • National Committee on Foreign Medical Education and Accreditation (NCFMEA)

    The NCFMEA is an operational committee comprised of 11 members appointed by the Secretary of Education that is responsible for reviewing the standards that foreign countries use to accredit medical schools to determine whether those standards are comparable to the standards used to accredit medical schools in the United States. If a country is determined to have comparable medical accreditation standards, then accredited medical schools in that country may apply to participate in the Title IV Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program. If the medical school meets the administrative and financial responsibility requirements to participate in the FFEL Program and signs a participation agreement with the U.S. Department of Education, then American students attending that foreign medical school may apply to receive loans under that program.

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U.S. Department of Education
Office of Postsecondary Education
1990 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20006


 
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Last Modified: 03/07/2008