THE LEGAL STATUS OF PRE-PRIMARY EDUCATION RTE FRAMEWORK IN INDIA
AUTHOR – YASH MITTAL, STUDENT AT SCHOOL OF LAW CHRIST (DEEMED TO BE UNIVERSITY), BENGALURU, INDIA
BEST CITATION – YASH MITTAL, THE LEGAL STATUS OF PRE-PRIMARY EDUCATION RTE FRAMEWORK IN INDIA, INDIAN JOURNAL OF LEGAL REVIEW (IJLR), 6 (3) OF 2026, PG. 23-35, APIS – 3920 – 0001 & ISSN – 2583-2344. DOI – https://doi.org/10.65393/IDKM9395
Abstract
This analysis examines whether the fundamental right to education in India, as incorporated in Article 21A[1], and the RTE Act, 2009, include pre-primary or early childhood education, or ages 0 to 6 years. Article 21A, incorporated in the 86th Constitutional Amendment in 2002, specifically includes children aged 6 to 14 years, and the RTE Act, 2009, implements this by specifically stating that “child” includes 6 to 14 years, and that free and compulsory education is to be provided to children in this age range. Pre-primary or early childhood education is not specifically included in Article 21A, but early childhood education is specifically addressed in welfare policies such as ICDS/Anganwadi, in general policies in NEP 2020 to achieve universal ECCE by 2030, and in the RTE Act, 2009, in Sec. 11, which specifically addresses the duty to provide preschool education for children aged 3 to 6 years, along with a proviso stating that 25% quota in schools admitting children in pre-school age may be permitted.
From a legal perspective, the top courts in India have not specifically addressed pre-primary or early childhood education in the context of a fundamental right, thereby limiting the RTE Act, 2009, to children aged 6 to 14 years[2]. In a few instances, the courts have addressed early childhood education: in Social Jurist v. GNCTD, 2013, the court indicated that the 25% quota in the RTE Act, 2009, could be applicable to children in nursery age, and in 2026, the Rajasthan High Court held that the RTE Act, 2009, provisions are applicable to children aged 3 to 6 in schools that offer pre-primary education, thereby addressing Sec. 11 and the quota proviso in the RTE Act,
In India, the disparity is evident when matched against nations like the UK, where free pre-school education is mandated under the EYFS statutory framework, and formal education is only compulsory from the age of 5. Now, in South Africa, it has been legally mandated for one year of pre-primary education for all children. Worldwide, conventions like the UNCRC and SDG 4.2 advocate for universal ECCE through instruments like UNCRC and SDG 4.2, promoting Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE). Yet, in India, the question of implementation still persists, with only 20% of children in the 3-5-year age bracket attending any form of pre-school education (2017-18 NSO), with the participation of rural, tribal, poor, and disabled children far behind others in the race. Anganwadis and pre-schools are plagued with the problem of infrastructure, funding, and training of teachers.
The paper is structured as follows: (I) Constitutional and legislative framework (Article 21A and the scope of the RTE Act); (II) Statutory and policy provisions for children in the 0-6 years age bracket (ICDS, NEP 2020, etc.); (III) Case law related to pre-primary and the RTE Act; (IV) Comparative law; (V) Implementation challenges; (VI) Access for marginalized groups; (VII) Policy recommendations; (VIII) Methodology and sources; and finally, conclusions and recommendations.
Keywords
Right to Education; Pre-Primary Education; Early Childhood Education; Article 21A; Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009; Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE); Constitutional Law; Educational Rights in India; Child Development Policy; Legal Framework of Education.
[1] Article 21A – Right to Education
INDIA CONST. art. 21A.
[2] The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, No. 35 of 2009, INDIA CODE (2009).