§ 21.124. Combination course.
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/us/cfr/t38/s§ 21.124·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(a)General. A combination course is a course which combines training on the job with training in school. For the purpose of VA vocational rehabilitation, a course will be considered to be a combination course, if the student spends full-time on the job and one or more times a week also attends school on a part-time basis. A veteran may pursue the components of a combination course in the following manner:
(1)Concurrent school and on-job training;
(2)Primarily on-job with some related instruction in school;
(3)In a school as a preparatory course to entering on-job training; or
(4)First training on-job followed by the school portion.
(b)Cooperative course. A cooperative course is a special type of combination course which usually:
(1)Has an objective which the student attains primarily through school instruction with the on-job portion being supplemental to the school course;
(2)Is at the college or junior college level although some cooperative courses are offered at post-secondary schools which do not offer a college degree or at secondary schools;
(3)Requires the student to devote at least one-half of the total training period to the school portion of the course; and
(4)Includes relatively long periods each of training on the job and in school such as a full term in school followed by a full term on the job. (Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3104(a)(7)) \[49 FR 40814, Oct. 18, 1984; 50 FR 9622, Mar. 11, 1985\]
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§ 21.124
Combination course.
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