In a constitutionally significant ruling with far-reaching implications for India’s educational and linguistic policy framework, the Supreme Court has held that a child possesses a fundamental right under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution to receive primary education in a language of their choice. The judgment, delivered by a Bench comprising Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta, elevates the question of medium of instruction beyond educational policy and places it squarely within the domain of constitutional freedoms.
The Court made these observations while directing the State of Rajasthan to introduce and facilitate the teaching of Rajasthani as a subject in schools and to take steps toward enabling its use as a medium of instruction. In doing so, the Bench articulated a broader constitutional principle: the right to freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a) necessarily includes the right of a child to receive information and education in a form that is meaningful, comprehensible, and linguistically accessible.
The Court observed that education is not merely a mechanism for formal instruction but the primary medium through which knowledge, cognition, and democratic participation are cultivated. Therefore, imparting education in a language best understood by the child enhances conceptual clarity, cognitive development, and meaningful learning outcomes. According to the Bench, the constitutional guarantee of free expression loses substantive value if information is communicated in a manner unintelligible to the learner.
The ruling is particularly important because it revives and strengthens principles earlier articulated in State of Karnataka v. Associated Management of English Medium Primary & Secondary Schools, where the Supreme Court held that the right to choose the medium of instruction at the primary level flows from Article 19(1)(a). In that decision, the Court had ruled that while States may encourage mother-tongue education, they cannot impose a compulsory language policy that extinguishes parental or child autonomy regarding educational medium.
The present judgment therefore deepens a constitutional tension that has long shaped Indian educational discourse: the conflict between linguistic preservation and individual choice. India’s constitutional structure simultaneously protects regional languages, encourages mother-tongue education, and guarantees individual freedoms. Balancing these competing objectives has historically produced intense political and legal controversy, particularly in multilingual States where questions of identity and language remain deeply sensitive.
Notably, the Court distinguished the right under Article 19(1)(a) from the right to education under Articles 21 and 21A. Earlier jurisprudence had clarified that while Article 21A guarantees free and compulsory education, it does not independently confer an absolute right to demand a specific medium of instruction from the State. Instead, the present constitutional foundation lies in freedom of expression and the right to receive information in an intelligible form.
This doctrinal distinction is jurisprudentially significant. By locating language choice within Article 19 rather than Article 21A, the Court transforms medium of instruction from a purely welfare-oriented educational entitlement into an aspect of civil liberty and expressive autonomy. Such reasoning expands the scope of free speech jurisprudence beyond conventional understandings of verbal or written expression into the realm of educational access and linguistic comprehension.
The judgment also reflects an evolving constitutional understanding of language itself. Historically, language policy in India has often been approached through majoritarian or administrative lenses, with governments seeking to promote regional or national linguistic identities. The Supreme Court’s reasoning, however, places the child rather than the State at the centre of constitutional analysis. The emphasis shifts from language as an instrument of cultural policy to language as a medium of cognitive freedom and individual development.
At another level, the ruling intersects with broader debates triggered by the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, which strongly advocates mother-tongue or regional-language instruction at the foundational stage of education. The NEP argues that children learn best in familiar linguistic environments and that early education in the mother tongue improves comprehension and retention. The Supreme Court’s observations broadly align with the pedagogical reasoning underlying the policy but simultaneously reaffirm that such objectives cannot override constitutional choice and autonomy.
Critically analysed, the judgment attempts to reconcile two competing constitutional visions. On one hand lies the State’s legitimate interest in preserving regional languages, promoting cultural identity, and improving educational outcomes through mother-tongue instruction. On the other lies the constitutional commitment to individual liberty and decisional autonomy. The Court appears to suggest that promotion of linguistic diversity must occur through facilitation and encouragement rather than coercive imposition.
This distinction is particularly relevant in the Indian social context, where language frequently intersects with class mobility and socio-economic aspiration. Across many States, English-medium education continues to be perceived as a pathway to economic opportunity and social advancement. Consequently, attempts by governments to mandate regional-language instruction have often encountered resistance from parents seeking English-medium education for their children. The constitutionalisation of linguistic choice under Article 19 therefore acquires substantial socio-economic significance.
The ruling additionally reflects judicial sensitivity toward educational inequality. Language barriers in primary education disproportionately affect children from marginalised communities, tribal regions, and linguistically diverse backgrounds. A child compelled to learn through an unfamiliar medium may face cognitive disadvantage from the earliest stages of formal education. By linking linguistic comprehension with meaningful access to knowledge, the Court implicitly acknowledges that educational equality cannot exist where comprehension itself is compromised.
At the same time, the judgment may revive concerns regarding the gradual decline of regional languages in India’s educational ecosystem. Critics of English-dominant education models argue that linguistic homogenisation weakens cultural diversity and disconnects children from local histories, traditions, and intellectual frameworks. The Court’s direction regarding Rajasthani language instruction indicates an attempt to protect linguistic heritage while preserving freedom of choice rather than imposing uniformity.
Another constitutionally important dimension of the ruling lies in its interpretation of the “right to receive information.” Indian free speech jurisprudence has progressively expanded Article 19(1)(a) to include not merely the right to speak but also the right to know, receive information, and access meaningful communication. Earlier cases such as State of U.P. v. Raj Narain recognized informational access as intrinsic to free expression. The present ruling extends that logic into educational pedagogy itself.
The judgment may also influence future litigation concerning educational policy, linguistic rights, and minority educational institutions. Several States continue to grapple with disputes involving compulsory regional-language instruction, minority-language schools, and balancing local linguistic preservation against parental preference. The Supreme Court’s reaffirmation of choice-based constitutional protection could become a crucial precedent in such cases.
Importantly, however, the Court did not reject the pedagogical importance of mother-tongue education. On the contrary, the Bench acknowledged that instruction in the mother language significantly improves conceptual understanding and cognitive engagement. The constitutional issue, therefore, is not whether mother-tongue education is desirable, but whether the State may impose linguistic choices upon children and parents irrespective of their preferences.
The ruling ultimately reflects a deeper constitutional philosophy regarding the nature of education in a democratic society. Education, according to the Court’s reasoning, cannot be reduced to administrative standardisation or linguistic nationalism. It must remain connected to individual comprehension, intellectual freedom, and the learner’s capacity to meaningfully engage with knowledge. In this sense, the judgment transforms language from a mere curricular question into an issue of constitutional dignity and democratic participation.
By recognising a child’s freedom to choose the medium of instruction under Article 19(1)(a), the Supreme Court has not merely settled a dispute concerning educational policy in Rajasthan. It has reopened a foundational constitutional conversation about language, identity, freedom, and the role of the State in shaping educational consciousness within one of the world’s most linguistically diverse democracies

