Homesteading at Mission Farmstead's Farm School: Building Life Skills

Homesteading at Mission Farmstead's Farm School: Building Life Skills

Michael Miller 4 min read

A few weeks ago, I found all three of my kids hovering over a pile of used coffee pods.

Aria, my oldest, had scissors. Ellie had a bowl. Theo—who’s two—was just excited to be included. They were on a mission: peel the aluminum tops off the K-cups, dump the coffee grounds into the compost bin, and sort the pieces for recycling.

They were learning what goes in the ground, what doesn’t, and how small choices can change how we treat the earth.

It wasn’t a science lesson. It was just a Thursday morning at home.

And honestly, that’s the kind of morning I hope kids experience at Mission Farmstead’s Farm School.

Because the more we build this place, the more convinced I am that if we want to raise strong, capable kids, we need to get them back on the land.

What Is Homesteading (and Why It Belongs in a School Setting)?

Homesteading isn’t about going off-grid or living like it’s the 1800s. It’s about learning the basic skills to be self-sufficient like how to grow your food, fix what’s broken, and care for the land and the people around you.

It teaches life skills for kids that most classrooms don’t make time for anymore.

At the farm school, kids won’t just read about where eggs come from. They'll collect them straight from the coop.

They won’t just watch a compost video on YouTube. They’ll toss in coffee grounds and stir the pile themselves.

They’ll learn how to make bread. Can tomatoes. Use hand tools. And take pride in the kind of work that makes them feel useful.

They’ll develop core skills rooted in real life—not just worksheets.

Why I'm Building a Farmsteading Learning Environment

I use the word farmsteading on purpose.

It’s a mix of homesteading values and small-scale, hands-on regenerative agriculture. It’s about farming for the family and the future.

Here’s what farmsteading will look like at Mission Farmstead’s Farm School:

  • Kids will care for animals and understand their role in the ecosystem
  • They'll plant, tend, and harvest food they'll eat and share
  • They’ll learn how to use what they grow by preserving, cooking and composting
  • They’ll see how land, water, sun, and soil work together

This kind of learning builds self-awareness, decision-making, and responsibility. It helps them ask not just “Can I?” but “Should I?”

Organic Farming for Kids

We talk a lot about organic farming at home.

That means no chemicals in the soil. No shortcuts in how we raise plants or animals. No sacrificing health for convenience.

It’s slower, but more real.

Kids at the Farm School will learn:

  • How to start a garden bed from seed
  • Why composting matters for the health of the soil
  • How natural pest control works
  • What "organic" actually means on a label

They’ll understand where food comes from. Not just because someone told them, but because they grew it.

They’ll taste the difference between a head of lettuce picked that morning and one wrapped in plastic.

And they’ll feel it—in their work, their choices, and how they think about the world around them.

Is This a Farm School?

Long story short, no. I'm not tacking a garden onto a building and calling it nature-based learning.

Mission Farmstead's School is borrowing the fundamentals that a farm school has. And rebuilding how we approach learning from the ground up.

That means:

  • The land is the classroom
  • Projects come from the seasons, the animals, the garden beds
  • Reflection comes after hard work, not just hard thinking

My vision is that someday, a kid will gather eggs, calculate feed costs (an easy way to learn math!), and write a journal entry about something they built with their hands.

It’s what homesteading schools have always known: kids thrive when their learning feels real.

The Classroom Economy Starts with Work 

At the Farm School, I want to use a simple classroom economy system.

Kids will earn “Hero Bucks” for work that matters:

  • Feeding animals
  • Turning compost
  • Harvesting greens
  • Helping a peer

They’ll use what they earn to budget, save, donate, or trade.

It’s not just a system for learning math. It’s practice in responsibility and decision-making.

Coffee Grounds, Compost, and the Bigger Picture

Back to those K-cups.

Most people toss them. The aluminum top ends up in the landfill. So do the grounds. But my kids are learning to see waste differently.

Now they know:

  • How to peel the aluminum for recycling
  • How to compost the grounds
  • How organic matter returns to the earth
  • How farming practices at home impact systems far beyond it

They’re not memorizing facts about sustainability. They’re doing it.

And that’s what I'll build at Mission Farmstead’s Farm School.

If you want your child to grow food, solve real problems, and understand how to take care of the land they live on, you’re not alone.

That’s why I’m building this school.

The doors aren’t open yet. But when they are, the learning will start with dirt under your nails. Learn more here.

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