Talk:State education

I put a note about this on the public school page but it may be easier to explain here. In at least some parts of England (Surrey and Hampshire in my case) the terminology used is the same as in Scotland. Essentially 'public school' referes to a state school (a term I believed to be exclusive to American where they have states to run 'state' school) and 'independant', 'public' and 'private' schools are all grouped together and called 'private' schools (sometimes a distinction can be made for grammar schools as well).

Essentially if you have to pay for it, or if theres any additional entry requirements beyond the basic ones set by the government its a private school, if not then its a public school.

If this change is accepted it may also be beneficial to add a disambiguation page, or something similar because it took me a very long time to find this page after I discovered the public school page was in fact talking about private schools. I had no idea what else to search for because I had never heard the term state school outside of the USA.

The terms 'independent school' and 'private school'. <- this sentence makes no sense...

Internationalize!
What is this with just the english speaking countries? Does anyone know if there are articles for the analogous types of Japanese schools (it seems like that should go in this article though) with: There might be more, I haven't given this much thought yet, but we need information about those and I don't know where it would be. -Theanphibian (talk • contribs) 17:38, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 * ken-ritsu (prefecture schools)
 * shi-ritsu (private)
 * koku-ritsu (national schools)

maintained school term what for
I just read the term "maintained school" in UK Visa Rules. (I'm asking about the root of this word here). note this article was redirected from maintained school article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.254.1.55 (talk) 15:36, 25 January 2010 (UTC)