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Public Schools in Baker City, OR
Bright Eyes Preschool - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 523-4349
Head Start Baker Program - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 523-2696
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Administration - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2260
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Bus Repair Shop - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 523-5443
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Elementary Schools- Brooklyn Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2450
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Elementary Schools- Churchill Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2400
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Elementary Schools- Keating Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 523-2377
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Elementary Schools- North Baker Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2300
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Elementary Schools- South Baker Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2350
Schools Public - Baker School District No 5J- Middle School- Baker Middle Sc - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 524-2500
Schools Public - Richland Elementary School - Baker City, OR - Phone: (541) 893-6151
Helpful Definition for: Public Schools
The term public school is commonly used in a school that relies on private funding sources. They are public in the sense of an initial public offering , anyone who can afford the tuition and meets the institutional requirements may attend, rather than the normal sense of being public, that is state run, institutions in Baker City.Schools which were subsequently reformed by the Public Schools Acts is termed commonly as private schools in general.
Often successful businessmen in earlier days would send their sons to a public school as a mark of participation in the elite and much of the discipline was in the hands of senior pupils,usually known as prefects, which was not just a means to reduce staffing costs, but was also seen as vital preparation for those pupils' later roles in public or military service in Baker City. More recently heads of public schools have been emphasizing that senior pupils now play a much reduced role in disciplining.
