A:
There is no inherent difference between Christian or public schools in terms of academic achievement. Where I live, final examination results are published annually, and one public school almost always comes on top of the league table, with both Christian independent and public schools taking the remaining places.
1 university, 8 colleges and trade schools; 74 public schools.
11 universities, 5 colleges, 185 public schools.
It was approximately 1960.
The state of Nebraska did not have public schools until halfway through the 19th century. The original year was in 1855.
11 universities and colleges, 8 technical and 2-year schools, 128 public schools.
Boston Public Schools Educator of the Year-2009
1845.....all but those schools in Boston until 10 years later
I attended Catholic schools for 12 years, and later taught public school, so I have a "both sides" viewpoint on this question. Catholic schools are more difficult than public schools largely because the expectations for the students are higher than they are in most public schools. On a grade-for-grade basis, the curriculum in Catholic schools is also more demanding, or perhaps more accurately, "farther along" for a given grade level. In both grade school and high school I had friends who left and went to public school, and later told me they were anywhere from a half a year to a full year ahead of the other kids in their grade in the public school. There are many variables, of course - some Catholic schools are better than others, and the best public schools I taught in were the equal of any Catholic school - those were public schools where the school and the parents had very high expectations for the students.
its a free country go ahead
some public schools have 180 and some other private schools have 100
Yes, there are schools in Madagascar. From the last statistic published in the Minister of Education website, in 2007/2008, there were for both public and private sectors: 24387 primary schools (prep to year 5), 2507 secondary schools (year 6 to 9), 542 high schools (year 10 to 12).
The first public schools in Alaska were established in 1905 while the area was still a United States territory. The first school in the area was opened in Ketchikan.