Forum Moderators: not2easy
Apparently in the UK "public school" means a school that is NOT run by the government. The idea is, I assume, that such a school was created by the public sector.
In the US, "public school" means just the opposite -- a school that is open to all public because it IS run by the goverment. Non-government run schooling is called "private school" in the US.
Do I have that right?
If you work in the "public sector" you are working for the government or state owned thingumies which is strange when you mention public school as that is a "private schools".
I will let you have that one tedster, we are weird :)
Mind you at least we spell and say aluminium correctly :)
Now he's got me trained and I tell friends in the UK that I'm back at University.
But I must've conjured up images in his brain of me sitting in one of those little teeny short desks in a row with a bunch of nine-year-olds! :)
Interesting catch, Tedster. I think there are also differences here in the U.S. in terms of school districts. I'm used to a school district being set by county lines (Washington Metropolitan area) ... down in Texas they're set by "Independent School District (ISD)" boundaries ... and if I'm not mistaken, in Louisiana they're set by Parish (Parish = County?).