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The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 remains inadequate in promoting incentive-based system for children’s education without generating awareness about the importance of schooling. Analyse.

Enacted under Article 21A, the RTE Act (2009) aims to provide free and compulsory elementary education to all children aged 6-14 years.

Key Features of RTE Act

Fundamental Right: Makes eight years of quality elementary education a justiciable right.

25% Reservation: Mandates private unaided schools to reserve seats for disadvantaged groups.

Infrastructure Norms: Sets binding standards for Pupil-Teacher Ratio, buildings, and toilets.

No-Detention Policy: Prohibits failing or expelling students until Class 8 (subject to later state-level amendments).

Zero Screening: Bans capitation fees and interview-based admissions for children or parents.

Teacher Standards: Mandates minimum professional qualifications and clearing of the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET).

Major Incentives Provided

Mid-Day Meals: Ensures nutritional support to improve attendance and concentration.

Free Uniforms and Textbooks: Eliminates the direct out-of-pocket costs of schooling.

Transport Allowances: Provided to children in remote areas lacking a neighborhood school.

Special Training: Bridge courses for out-of-school children to join age-appropriate classes.

Infrastructure Grants: Funding for functional girls’ toilets and drinking water facilities.

Scholarships: Target-based financial aid for SC, ST, and minority students.

Major Issues in Promoting Incentive-Based System

Prevalence of Child Labour and lack of awareness about Education importance – Eg- High seasonal dropouts in agriculture-heavy districts of Bihar/UP in 2025. (ASER 2025)

Marginalized families remain unaware of the 25% EWS quota and online application portals.

Perverse Incentives: Focus on attendance for meals/books rather than actual learning engagement or outcomes.

The “Class 9” Cliff: Incentives stop at Class 8, leading to massive dropouts once fees are introduced.

Learning Poverty Paradox: ASER 2024 reports that only ~43% of Class V students can read a Class II-level text.

Geographical Exclusion: Over 8.1 million children from urban slums remained out of school in early 2026. (NAC Implementation Report)

Stigmatization: EWS children in elite schools face social alienation

Way Forward

Awareness Campaigns: Use “Nukkad Nataks” and local influencers to explain the “value” of education beyond meals. Eg- “Vidyanjali 2.0” community volunteer programs.

Extension of Mandate: Extend free education up to Class 12 to prevent the “Class 9 dropout” crisis. (NEP 2020)

Outcome-Based Incentives: Transition from “enrollment incentives” to “outcome-linked” benefits for schools and students. Eg- NIPUN Bharat performance-linked grants

Documentation Camps: Organize “on-the-spot” certificate camps in schools for EWS/Caste certificate verification.

Social Integration Training: Sensitize private school teachers to prevent the stigmatization of EWS students in classrooms.

Strengthening SMCs: Empower School Management Committees to conduct local social audits of learning quality.

Public School Revamp: Elevate government school quality (PM SHRI) to make them the “first choice” for parents.

RTE must shift from a “Right to Enrollment” to a “Right to Learning” by prioritizing awareness over mere fiscal incentives.