The Catholic Church runs many schools in Ireland, but there are various other groups, public and private, that run schools too.
About 30 countries around the world.
In the US, all State run schools would have a cafeteria. Private schools usually have cafeterias also but they may have an alternate plan.
schools.
There are a great many quality private schools in almost all states under the Holy Trinity name run under the jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic Church.
There are many Montessori schools in Australia. A full listing can be found on the Montessori Australia website. Most of this schools are either privately or individually run and offer a great eduction.
Many states have online elementary and high schools for students who are residents in that state. These online schools include schools run by the state, charter schools and private schools. This website has a list of online K-12 schools by state: http://distancelearn.about.com/od/onlinepublicschools/a/OnlinePS.htm
Schools in Papua New Guinea are either private or government run. Private schools include an international or a church/mission curriculum that is implemented alongside the national curriculum. Private schools are much more expensive due to the higher quality of education, and as a result, expatriates tend to send their children to such schools, including nationals who can afford to. Government run schools are less fortunate. In urban centres government schools are functional but overpopulated with as much as 40-50 students to one teacher. Rural schools are fairly run-down with little to no equipment for teachers and students to use. The isolation, poor payment, housing conditions cause a lot of teachers to leave the schools. Many students in government run schools do not complete their education and very few return - well-past their learning-age repeating subjects they need to complete which will take them to higher-learning institutions like colleges and universities.
State schools are owned and run by the state. Private (public) schools are owned and run by private individuals (usually trusts/charities or relgious bodies today, rather than any single person).
alternative!
schools run by the gov.
Yes, Napoleon introduced public-run schools, called Lycees.