If $k=2$, the answer is $2[(n+1)/2]-1$.
If $k=2$, then there are $n\choose2$ pairs, and each partition gets at most $[n/2]$ of them, so you can't do better than ${n\choose2}/[n/2]$, which is $2[(n+1)/2]-1$. So we have to show that we can achieve $2[(n+1)/2]-1$.
First let $n=2m-1$ be odd. Let the first partition be 1-with-$n$, 2-with-$(n-1)$, ...,
$(m-1)$-with-$(m+1)$,$m$-by-itself. Get the other partitions by repeatedly adding 1 to each number in the previous partition, working modulo $n$.
E.g., for $n=7$, the first partition is 1-7, 2-6, 3-5, 4, and the others are
2-1, 3-7, 4-6, 5; 3-2, 4-1, 5-7, 6; 4-3, 5-2, 6-1, 7; 5-4, 6-3, 7-2, 1;
6-5, 7-4, 1-3, 2; and 7-6, 1-5, 2-4, 3.
Now if $n=2m$ is even, just take the solution for $n=2m-1$ and in each partition pair $n$ up with the singleton. E.g., when $n=8$, the solution starts 1-7, 2-6, 3-5, 4-8;
2-1, 3-7, 4-6, 5-8; etc.
As Douglas notes, this is a problem of factoring the symmetric graph. For $k=2$ we're factoring it into 1-factors, and undoubtedly what I've written above is well-known.