No. I suggest a few reasons.It can not be consistently applied in all circumstances. Suppose that a disaster struck and society was struggling just to feed itself. There would not be enough resources to devote to education.It may violate rights to property and liberty. Educating a person at a university requires resources and labor. To guarantee an education may force some people to surrender their property to pay for it. Theoretically, it could also require the teachers to be enslaved to do it without pay.An education is a desirable thing, and we should endeavor to educate everyone. In this spirit, we find many endowments, scholarships, and other voluntary efforts to broaden access to education. You may rightly complain that educational opportunities are not widely enough available. Do you really endorse violating other rights to attain it?The only basic right that I endorse is the right of a person to own him or herself. From this right spring the rights to life, liberty and property [1].