Příbram was the site of the Mining University, the tradition of which still continues today however the institution was moved to
Ostrava in 1945. High schools offer in Příbram includes two gymnasiums, technical school, business academy, medical school and training college. Gymnasium Příbram was founded 1871 and serves as a general educational
propaedeutics institutions for applicants for university studies. The Pod Svatou Horou gymnasium was founded in the 1990s. The technical school was derived from the preliminary courses of the Mining University, so called Mining School, founded already in 1851. In 2006 the school had 564 students. Seven elementary schools are in Příbram, six of them with traditional educational program (the number was reduced by two in the 1990s). The remaining one, found in 1991, stands on the
Waldorf education program and it has also opened its own high school. The town has 13 kindergartens and runs also two musical and art schools.
Mining University in Příbram (1894–1945) specimen from a uranium mine near Příbram Mining education in Příbram dates from the beginning of the 19th century. The School of Mines was founded in 1851 and it was changed to Mining Academy in 1865. It was then the only mining educational institution in the
Czech lands. The academy struggled in the shadow of
Leoben academy, which repeatedly obtained its privileges in advance. Important professors and lecturers of this era include: • Geologist
František Pošepný: one of the most important educators in the 19th century and of all the school's history; • Mine surveyor ()
Gustav Ziegelheim: Professor for mining,
ore processing and mine
surveying as of 1882, Director of the School of Mines in 1883–1885 and in 1889–1895. In 1894, the academy received its university status decree and A. Hoffmann was elected the first chancellor of the university in 1898. At the beginning of the 20th century the national conflicts lead to attempts to move Leoben academy to
Vienna, while the Příbram school should have been dissolved. Long proceedings and the fact, that three quarters of the mining production of the
Austria-Hungary was provided by the mines in the
Czech lands, resulted in keeping both mining schools (Leoben and Příbram) alive. In 1904 both Leoben and Příbram institutions were renamed Mining Academy () with
Josef Theurer as the first chancellor. The university started with 11 departments, but the number grew to 18 in 1924. The university had the right to name doctors of mining sciences (
dr. mont.). The highest number of students was almost 500 in 1921, but in the late 1930s the number fell to 120. The position of the institution changed basically after arousal of
Czechoslovakia in 1918, one year later the
Czech language became the official language of the university. Many attempts to move it out of Příbram recurred, several of them initiated from the university itself, but they were refused.
World War II and the closure of Czech universities interrupted the work of the institution, which was resumed in 1945. The university was however moved to
Ostrava within few months to bring the education closer to the booming mining industry in the Ostrava region. The last mining university students left Příbram in 1946 summer. ==Sport==