SC Reaffirms Section 12(1)(c) of RTE Act for Shared Learning Spaces

In a significant judgment delivered in January 2026, the Supreme Court of India underscored the transformative power of Section 12(1)(c) of the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009. The Court highlighted that the provision is not merely an enrollment quota but a tool for fundamental social engineering.

Why in News

  • In a January 2026 judgment, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the purpose of Section 12(1)(c) of the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009.
  • This provision reserves 25% of seats in private schools for students from Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) and disadvantaged groups.
  • Over five million children have been enrolled since its rollout, with retention rates averaging over 90%.
  • The Court stated it allows the child of a multi-millionaire to sit on the same bench as the child of a street vendor.

Impact

  • Economic: States must manage timely reimbursements to private schools to prevent financial strain.
  • Social: Mixed classrooms lead to increased generosity, reduced discrimination, and stronger pro-social behavior.
  • Policy: Digital admission systems in Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Delhi have strengthened access and accountability.
  • Ecological: [NOT RELEVANT]

GS Paper Focus

GS-2 — Governance: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Education.

Policies & Schemes

  1. Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act, 2009.
  2. Section 12(1)(c) (25% EWS Quota).

System-level Insight

The RTE integration identifies the “Social Capital Reservoir.” Beyond academics, the provision grants EWS children access to peer networks and institutional cultures previously out of reach. This turns the classroom into a site of “Deliberate Constitutional Strategy,” where the state uses private infrastructure not to “outsource” its duty, but to “operationalize” social status equality.

Interview Angle

Does the 25% EWS quota in private schools solve the crisis of ‘Educational Apartheid‘ in India, or does it mask the decline of the public school system? Discuss with reference to the 2026 SC judgment.

Vocabulary

  1. Shared learning spaces — environments where diverse groups learn together — Basic
  2. Zero-sum contest — a situation where one side’s gain is the other’s loss — Intermediate
  3. Moral persuasion — an appeal to ethics rather than law — Basic
  4. Trajectory — the path followed by a person or object — Basic
  5. Insurmountable — too great to be overcome — Basic