Juneberry Hill Schoolhouse is a multi-age, one-room schoolhouse where practical life skills, friendships, and character building are emphasized as well as traditional academic curriculum. Students receive instruction in agriculture, practice homestead skills, and utilize the outdoors in a rural setting.
Juneberry Hill Schoolhouse is a community-crafted education center. Following a blended model, homeschooled students meet one or two days each week to learn together under the guidance of a teacher and receive instruction from their parents at home the other days.
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Marlin and Lisa Miller adopted all four of their children. Their oldest son is on the Autism Spectrum and the three youngest children all have Down syndrome. Their youngest son has Mosaic Down syndrome. A former public school teacher, Lisa has homeschooled their children since 2009. The Millers also wanted their children to have the opportunity to learn alongside other students. Marlin and Lisa stepped out in faith to reimagine what home education looks like for their children and built a one-room schoolhouse on their homestead where their children and other students can learn together under the direction of a teacher one or two days each week.
Inspired by Rory Feek and Hardison Mill School (the one-room schoolhouse he built on his farm for his daughter, Indiana, who has Down syndrome), the Miller family purchased the original frame from an 1850 one-room schoolhouse in Franklin County, Indiana, to rebuild. As an extension of their homeschooling, academic skills are taught alongside practical life skills in the gardens, orchard, barns, and pastures. Most important to the Miller family is that the schoolhouse be a place where all students are valued members of the community, whether their needs are unique or typical.
Our schoolhouse is a restored one-room schoolhouse built in 1850. It was originally located in Posey Township, Franklin County, Indiana and was referred to as School No.3. (Other names for the school may have included Bull Fork, Griner, Croddy, or Siders School.) After the one-room schoolhouses were consolidated in the early 1930’s, this schoolhouse was turned into a residence. After the residence was torn down, we purchased the original hand-hewn framework of the schoolhouse and rebuilt it on our little farm.