The journey of providing Universal Elementary Education Right to Free and
Compulsory Education in our country began in the year 1946, during the task of
the framing of our Constitution. It took 60 years, after completing a full
circle to come back to what was envisaged in the year 1947.
The Constituent Assembly began its task in the year 1946. In 1947, the Ways and
Means (Kher) Committee was set up to explore ways and means of achieving
Universal Elementary Education within ten years.
The Constituent Assembly (Sub-committee on Fundamental Rights) placed the right
to free and compulsory education on the list of Fundamental Rights and suggested
Clause 23.
Clause 23:
Every citizen is entitled as of a right to free primary education and it
shall be the duty of the State to provide within a period of ten years from the
commencement of this Constitution for free and compulsory primary education for
all children until they complete the age of fourteen years.
The same year the Advisory Committee of the Constituent Assembly rejected the
suggestion to provide free and compulsory education as a fundamental right
quoting the costs as a reason and sent Clause 23 to the list of
Non-Justiciable Fundamental Rights which was later termed as Directive
Principles of State Policy.
In 1949, during the debate in the Constituent Assembly, it was decided to remove
the first line of ‘Article 36’…Every citizen is entitled as of right to free
primary education and it shall be the duty of the State to.. and was replaced
with The State shall endeavour to..
Finally, in the year 1950, Article 45 was placed and accepted under the head of
Directive Principles of State Policy. Article 45 – The State shall endeavour to
provide, within a period of ten years from the commencement of this
Constitution, for free and compulsory education for all children until they
complete the age of fourteen years.
From 1950 to 1993, the directive principle embodied in Article 45 remained in
hibernation, till the Supreme Court, in Unni Krishnan J.P. vs. State of
Andhra Pradesh, held that Article 45 as originally enacted by the framers of
the Constitution was in force. Justice B.P. Jeevan Reddy, speaking for the
majority, held that the right to free and compulsory education was a fundamental
right under Article 21. Justice S. Mohan, in his concurring opinion, held that
Article 45 has to be read as a part of Article 21, and that therefore the right
to free education up to the age of 14 years is a fundamental right.
In 1997, a Bill was brought in the Rajya Sabha proposing to insert Article 21A
in the Constitution of India and make education for children in the age group of
6 to 14 years a fundamental right. Yet again, this was diluted by entrusting
this task to the State Government by stating that State shall enact laws for
ensuring the free and compulsory education.
Subsequently, in 2002, a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court (11 judges) in T.M.A.
Pai affirmed the finding in Unnikrishanan that primary education is a
fundamental right and that Article 45 as it then stood had to be read into
Article 21. The Constitution (Eighty-Sixth Amendment) Act, 2002 formalised this
constitutional interpretation of the Supreme Court by a newly engrafted Article
21A.
The Eighty-Sixth Amendment Act made three changes:
However the amendment remained in slumber and was not brought into force till
2010. Finally, on 1st April 2010, Part III relating to Fundamental Rights of the
Constitution of India was amended by inserting and bringing into force Article
21A and the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act, 2009
was enacted.
The statement of objects and reasons and the parliamentary debate reflects that
it was the joint duty of the Central and the State Governments to provide free
education in pursuance of Article 21A. In fact, the Ninth Five Year Plan
reflected that this sharing of duty would be in the ratio of 15:85 for the first
five years; 25:75 in the next five years and finally 50:50 in the subsequent
five years.
Correspondingly, the Constitution was also amended to insert Clause (k) in
Article 51A in Chapter IV-A (Fundamental Duties), whereby an obligation was cast
on every parent or guardian to provide opportunity for education to his child
between the age of 6 to 14 years. Curiously, the parliamentary debates indicate
that though there was a consensus that it was a duty of the parents to provide
opportunity for education to their children, the penalty for non-compliance of
this fundamental duty was quantified to only 50 paise to 1 Rupee.
UNESCO report of 2016 says that over 60 million children in India receive little
or no formal education and the country has over 11.1 million out-of-school
students in the lower secondary level, highest in the world.
A recent survey by CRY of 122 schools in Pune, Ahmednagar, Gadchiroli, Parbhani,
Aurangabad, Latur, Beed and Mumbai revealed:
Education is a fundamental right and the basis for progress in every country.
Parents need information about health and nutrition if they are to give their
children the start in life they deserve. Prosperous countries depend on skilled
and educated workers. The challenges of conquering poverty, combating climate
change and achieving truly sustainable development in the coming decades compel
us to work together. With partnership, leadership and wise investments in
education, we can transform individual lives, national economies and our world.
- United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
The RTE Act crucially leaves children between 3 and 6 years of age – the most
formative years of a child’s life – out of its purview. 15 to 18 year olds find
themselves in a similar situation, with little chance of completing their
education if they cannot pay for it. The Act does not offer much to ensure
learning outcomes for children, which is fundamental for any education system to
be meaningful.
The vision of the founding fathers to provide free elementary education to all
citizens within ten years from the framing of the Constitution has remained a
distant dream and a mere illusion even after 71 years.
How To File For Mutual Divorce In Delhi Mutual Consent Divorce is the Simplest Way to Obtain a D...
It is hoped that the Prohibition of Child Marriage (Amendment) Bill, 2021, which intends to inc...
One may very easily get absorbed in the lives of others as one scrolls through a Facebook news ...
The Inherent power under Section 482 in The Code Of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (37th Chapter of t...
The Uniform Civil Code (UCC) is a concept that proposes the unification of personal laws across...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing various sectors of the economy, and the legal i...
Please Drop Your Comments