Right to education: A Review

Authors

  • Dr. Sudhir kumar pundir Associate professor, Deptt. Of Education Meerut college, Meerut

Keywords:

Shiksha, Government, achievement

Abstract

There are specific time constraints mandated by India's Constitutional Amendment 86, which declares free and compulsory elementary education for children aged 6 to 14 as a Fundamental Right. The SSA programme is the Government of India's flagship programme designed to achieve UEE within those time constraints. Allegiance to the government of India lies with the Ministry of Human Resources Development (MHRD). We've been running since about 2000-2001. There have been significant changes in the SSA approach, strategy and also rules since the RTE Act of 20091 was passed. Central and state governments are supporting SSA, which covers the whole nation. SSA now serves 192 million children from 1.1 million homes. SSA's success depends on the involvement of the general public. At each level of the program's execution, the plan encourages the engagement and monitoring of the community.

References

Krishnamurti, J. (1992). Education and world peace. In Social responsibility. Krishnamurti Foundation.

Kumar, K. (2013). Politics of education in colonial India. India: Routledge.

Mani, R.S. (1964). Educational Ideas and Ideals of Gandhi and Tagore, New Book Society, New Delhi.

Manoj Das (1999). Sri Aurobindo on Education, National Council for Teacher Education, New Delhi.

Mohanty, J., (1986). School Education in Emerging Society, Sterling Publishers.

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Published

2018-03-30

How to Cite

kumar pundir, D. S. (2018). Right to education: A Review. Innovative Research Thoughts, 4(2), 247–251. Retrieved from https://irt.shodhsagar.com/index.php/j/article/view/514