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Definition of School system
1. Noun. Establishment including the plant and equipment for providing education from kindergarten through high school.
Group relationships: Base, Infrastructure
Terms within: School, Schoolhouse
Lexicographical Neighbors of School System
Literary usage of School system
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1917)
"Nat Educ Assn 1916: 917-34 Cooperation in a school system. FD Boyn- ton. Educ R
53:329-40 Ap '17 Educational confusion and the remedy. ..."
2. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1916)
"El School J 16:406-8 Ap '16; Educ R 52:191-4 S '16 Reorganization of the public
school system. FF Bunker. US Bur Educ Bui 1916.8:1-186 Reorganization of the ..."
3. Public School Administration: A Statement of the Fundamental Principles by Ellwood Patterson Cubberley (1916)
"Practically every addition made to a school system with a view to increasing ...
In any growing American city the school system is continually calling for ..."
4. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"... is under the public school system. It has been estimated that the average
annual per capita cost of parish school education m the United States is $8. ..."
5. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"This is, therefore, about the amount of money that the Catholic school system
saves annually to the States. teaching would be more easily made as well as ..."
6. Public School Administration: A Statement of the Fundamental Principles by Ellwood Patterson Cubberley (1916)
"Practically every addition made to a school system with a view to increasing ...
In any growing American city the school system is continually calling for ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1920)
"It does not mean that a State school system may be established which must of
necessity, by its very form of organization, give to the children of one ..."