The Constitution (Eighty-sixth
Amendment) Act, 2002 inserted Article 21-A in the Constitution of India to
provide free and compulsory education of all children in the age group of six
to fourteen years as a Fundamental Right in such a manner as the State may, by
law, determine. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE)
Act, 2009, which represents the consequential legislation envisaged under
Article 21-A, means that every child has a right to full time elementary education
of satisfactory and equitable quality in a formal school which satisfies
certain essential norms and standards.
Article 21-A and the RTE Act came
into effect on 1 April 2010. The title of the RTE Act incorporates the words
‘free and compulsory’. ‘Free education’ means that no child, other than a child
who has been admitted by his or her parents to a school which is not supported
by the appropriate Government, shall be liable to pay any kind of fee or
charges or expenses which may prevent him or her from pursuing and completing
elementary education. ‘Compulsory education’ casts an obligation on the
appropriate Government and local authorities to provide and ensure admission,
attendance and completion of elementary education by all children in the 6-14 age
group. With this, India has moved forward to a rights based framework that
casts a legal obligation on the Central and State Governments to implement this
fundamental child right as enshrined in the Article 21A of the Constitution, in
accordance with the provisions of the RTE Act.
The RTE Act provides for the:
- Right of children to free and compulsory education till
completion of elementary education in a neighbourhood school.
- It clarifies that ‘compulsory education’ means
obligation of the appropriate government to provide free elementary
education and ensure compulsory admission, attendance and completion of
elementary education to every child in the six to fourteen age group.
‘Free’ means that no child shall be liable to pay any kind of fee or
charges or expenses which may prevent him or her from pursuing and
completing elementary education.
- It makes provisions for a non-admitted child to be
admitted to an age appropriate class.
- It specifies the duties and responsibilities of
appropriate Governments, local authority and parents in providing free and
compulsory education, and sharing of financial and other responsibilities
between the Central and State Governments.
- It lays down the norms and standards relating inter
alia to Pupil Teacher Ratios (PTRs), buildings and infrastructure,
school-working days, teacher-working hours.
- It provides for rational deployment of teachers by
ensuring that the specified pupil teacher ratio is maintained for each
school, rather than just as an average for the State or District or Block,
thus ensuring that there is no urban-rural imbalance in teacher postings.
It also provides for prohibition of deployment of teachers for
non-educational work, other than decennial census, elections to local
authority, state legislatures and parliament, and disaster relief.
- It provides for appointment of appropriately trained
teachers, i.e. teachers with the requisite entry and academic
qualifications.
- It prohibits (a) physical punishment and mental
harassment; (b) screening procedures for admission of children; (c)
capitation fee; (d) private tuition by teachers and (e) running of schools
without recognition,
- It provides for development of curriculum in consonance
with the values enshrined in the Constitution, and which would ensure the
all-round development of the child, building on the child’s knowledge,
potentiality and talent and making the child free of fear, trauma and
anxiety through a system of child friendly and child centred learning.
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