Schoolhouse in a sentence as a noun

The rules of economics don't end at the schoolhouse door.

Working on a reactor in an old schoolhouse in a rural area?

> all the potential social advantages of being roughly grouped by ageActually, from what I've seen the one-room-schoolhouse concept is the best.

Even to the extent that it's anything more than rhetorical flourish, it's misleading to read the language in terms of modern understandings or schoolhouse revisionist history.

The 19th- & early 20th-C fiction I read as a child that included teachers, seemed full of examples of "one-room schoolhouse" teachers who were routinely physically attacked by students and parents, widely derided by less-violent community members, and frequently paid late or not in full.

Schoolhouse definitions

noun

a building where young people receive education; "the school was built in 1932"; "he walked to school every morning"

See also: school