THE STONE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL
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Explore the Giving Options at Stone.
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The Stone Independent School is a progressive, interdisciplinary 7-12 school which believes that all students learn best by doing.
Since it’s very inception, Stone has been supported by an unusually philanthropic community who deeply understands the value of our education, and who believes that Stone should remain accessible to all students.
While each contains different tactics, all four of our Giving Options work together to support the short and long-term health of the school.
Annual Giving is how we ensure our need blind program and our annual operations. We recommend that our Stone supporters start here. See below for more information.
Capital Giving works to sustain and develop our physical plant.
Endowed Giving ensures our future.
Planned Giving provides our supporters with a number of different ways to support Stone now and the future.
[Zhuzh language here to line up with Giving] We invite you to explore and discover what makes our school unique, and we look forward to the possibility of welcoming you to this remarkable and remarkably creative community. As you have questions, please reach out – otherwise know how much we’re looking forward to working with you!
The Development Team
Mike Simpson (Head of School) + Names (?)
Giving Options
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Annual Giving is our most urgent area of philanthropic need, and where we hope all of our supporters begin.
We coordindate across five campaigns — The Annual Fund, The ExtraGive, The Chili Cook-off, and the Pennsylvania State EITC Program, to raise 20% of our operating funds each year.
Most gifts to Stone can be made right here; if you are interested in participating in the EITC program, please email our Development Team at development@stoneindependent.org.
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Because we are a problem-based school, our students encounter complex (or "wicked") problems throughout the work they do. We empower our students to grapple with complex problems by supply them with four core problem-solving frameworks:
Systems Thinking
Design Thinking
Entrepreneurial Mindset
The Aristolean Triangle
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Prior to commencement, Stone students are required to earn six credits in foundational English courses (9th and 10th grade), six credits in foundational History courses (9th and 10th grade), 12 credits in Upper Level Humanities courses (11th - 12th grade), 10 credits in mathematics courses, 10 credits in lab science courses, 2 credits of in the arts, and advance past Level III of a world language. In addition, Stone students must complete two credits of Entrepreneurial Thinking (9th and 10th grade), and three Exhibition Courses: The BCQ (10th grade); Junior Workshop (11th Grade), and Senior Defense (12th grade).
Stone students have a wide variety of courses to choose from. See our Course Selection Guide here, and see below for just a few examples:
Multivariable Calculus
Music Theory
Dance Composition
Chinese Folktales and Ghost Stories
Ecology and the Environment
The Science of SCUBA
Waves, Sound and Quantum Mechanics
Andean Mythology
Islam in America
How to Read a Film: An Introduction to Film Criticism
Advanced Humanities: Bildungsroman
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STEM Honors. By invitation/application only. Students in STEM Honors engage in a year-long independent and novel research project that is largely conducted outside of school hours. They are required to produce significant academic artifacts and meet regular deadlines to be allowed to remain in the program and to exhibit on Honors Night. Students who earn STEM Honors will have that achievement designated on their transcripts, as well as be recognized at Commencement.
Humanities Honors. By invitation/application only. Students in Humanities Honors in a self-directed and research-based project outside of the ordinary course offerings of the department. The program requires students to be inquisitive, exploratory, experimental, and bold and exhibit evidence of the most difficult application of the skills-centered work we practice at Stone. Students who earn Humanities Honors will have that achievement designated on their transcripts, as well as be recognized at Commencement.
Global/Experiential Education Program. Woven into our 7-12 curriculum. We believe that offering meaningful opportunities for students to dive deeply into academic, social, and cultural learning outside of our our regular coursework cultivates curiosity, empathy, identity, and confidence. We also believe strongly in the power of reflection that experiential learning provides. Several of our students have identified future areas of post-secondary study through our experiential education programs. Recent trips have including spelunking, marine research on a sailboat in the Bahamas, Patagonia rewilding, Icelandic earth science research, and National Parks trekking trips.
Leadership Education Ecosystem.
The Big Curiosity Quest (Sophomore Year). The Big Curiosity Quest. Required for 10th grade students. Born in the spring of 2020 when Stone used the necessary pivot to distance learning to temporarily re-write our curriculum into an interdisciplinary inquiry-based experience, the BCQ is now a one-Mod research course where students are asked to respond to a single, interdisciplinary question in the form of public presentation and exhibition of synthesis. This course requires an intentional practice of being curious, an emphasis on process, and the ability to unpack difficult concepts.
Junior Workshop. Required for 11th grade students. The Junior Workshop is a two-Mod course for which eleventh-grade students create knowledge, insight, beauty and/or function by executing a project which arises out of their own passions. The project requires significant research, but a student’s product may not be a report on this knowledge: they must bring something new into the world. Students are evaluated on their original research, product design, and project management skills. Students must give a 15-minute presentation followed by a 15-minute Q&A from a Faculty Panel to complete the course.
Senior Defense. Required for 12th grade students. Senior Defense is a significant research project that serves as a synthesis of learning, and the defense of a student’s academic and intellectual growth during their time at Stone. Senior Defense is different from a capstone project in that a student is given a personalized question to which they respond in depth. Pre-advising for the question takes place from October to December, questions are sent in March, and in June students must deliver their final response during a 30-minute presentation, defending their process and “product”, followed by a 30-minute Q&A with a Faculty Panel.
Comprehensive, Multi-Year Entrepreneurial Thinking Program. The Stone Independent School is the first school in our region to offer a comprehensive, multi-year, entrepreneurial program. Students are required to take Entrepreneurial Thinking I & II, and they are expected to apply an “entrepreneurial mindset framework” to all challenges they encounter during their time at Stone. We ask them to recognize and act on opportunity, practice making decisions with limited information, and remain adaptable and resilient in conditions that are uncertain and complex.
Physics-First, Integrated Sciences Program. Our 9-11th science program is a physics-first, integrated sciences program, wherein students take physics, chemistry, and biology lab courses each year. Ninth-grade students also take a required science data and measurement course called Structured Curiosity.
Start here.
Annual Giving Options at Stone.
Annual Giving is our most urgent area of philanthropic need — ensuring our need blind program and our annual operations.
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The Portrait of a Graduate provides direction for our course development. The language of Stone’s Portrait of a Graduate began with faculty describing the hopes and the dreams we had for young people: what would really prepare them for the world into which they’d be released? What would make them independent, well-read, empathetic, creative, and curious? What kind of competencies could ensure effective problem-solving and activate imagination? What would make them strong logical thinkers and confident contributors? How could we decenter the “self” whilst simultaneously cultivating selfhood?
Our goal for all students is that they demonstrate evidence of proficiency or mastery in the core skills of each course they take; their proficiency is assessed through a culture of feedback as well as grading. All of it should align upward: the work our students do in their classrooms serves to help master the skills; the skills they practice enable them to respond to "Big Questions"; those questions serve as trailheads on their journey through the competencies in our Portrait of a Graduate; the Portrait of a Graduate empowers each of us to serve and execute our Mission.
1. Design Thinking. Interacting, reflection, collaborating, incorporating feedback, viewing failure as an opportunity to learn, and acknowledging that innovation requires small successes and frequent mistakes;2. Leadership and Teamwork. Initiating new ideas and leading through influence; facilitating group discussions, forging consensus, and negotiating outcomes; collaborating on tasks, managing groups, and delegating responsibility;
3. Rhetoric. Writing, speaking, and reading across disciplines;
4. Risk-taking and Initiative. Bringing a sense of courage to unfamiliar situations; exploring and experimenting; working effectively in a climate of ambiguity; and cultivating an independence of spirit to explore new roles;
5. Civics. Applying personal communication skills, knowledge of political systems, and the ability to think critically about civic and political life to become engaged citizens.
6. Global Perspectives. Developing open-mindedness, particularly regarding the values and traditions of others; understanding non-western history, politics, culture, and religions; developing facility with one or more foreign languages; developing social and intellectual skills to navigate effectively across cultures; using 21st Century skills to address global issues;
7. Entrepreneurial Mindset. Using creativity and imagination to solve problems; recognizing and acting on opportunity; being capable of making decisions with limited information; remaining adaptable and resilient in conditions that are uncertain and complex.
8. STEM Literacy. Identifying, applying, and experimenting with integrated concepts from science, technology, engineering and mathematics to describe and solve complex problems.
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Because we are a problem-based school, our students encounter complex (or "wicked") problems throughout the work they do. We empower our students to grapple with complex problems by supply them with four core problem-solving frameworks:
Systems Thinking
Design Thinking
Entrepreneurial Mindset
The Aristolean Triangle
-
Prior to commencement, Stone students are required to earn six credits in foundational English courses (9th and 10th grade), six credits in foundational History courses (9th and 10th grade), 12 credits in Upper Level Humanities courses (11th - 12th grade), 10 credits in mathematics courses, 10 credits in lab science courses, 2 credits of in the arts, and advance past Level III of a world language. In addition, Stone students must complete two credits of Entrepreneurial Thinking (9th and 10th grade), and three Exhibition Courses: The BCQ (10th grade); Junior Workshop (11th Grade), and Senior Defense (12th grade).
Stone students have a wide variety of courses to choose from. See our Course Selection Guide here, and see below for just a few examples:
Multivariable Calculus
Music Theory
Dance Composition
Chinese Folktales and Ghost Stories
Ecology and the Environment
The Science of SCUBA
Waves, Sound and Quantum Mechanics
Andean Mythology
Islam in America
How to Read a Film: An Introduction to Film Criticism
Advanced Humanities: Bildungsroman
-
STEM Honors. By invitation/application only. Students in STEM Honors engage in a year-long independent and novel research project that is largely conducted outside of school hours. They are required to produce significant academic artifacts and meet regular deadlines to be allowed to remain in the program and to exhibit on Honors Night. Students who earn STEM Honors will have that achievement designated on their transcripts, as well as be recognized at Commencement.
Humanities Honors. By invitation/application only. Students in Humanities Honors in a self-directed and research-based project outside of the ordinary course offerings of the department. The program requires students to be inquisitive, exploratory, experimental, and bold and exhibit evidence of the most difficult application of the skills-centered work we practice at Stone. Students who earn Humanities Honors will have that achievement designated on their transcripts, as well as be recognized at Commencement.
Global/Experiential Education Program. Woven into our 7-12 curriculum. We believe that offering meaningful opportunities for students to dive deeply into academic, social, and cultural learning outside of our our regular coursework cultivates curiosity, empathy, identity, and confidence. We also believe strongly in the power of reflection that experiential learning provides. Several of our students have identified future areas of post-secondary study through our experiential education programs. Recent trips have including spelunking, marine research on a sailboat in the Bahamas, Patagonia rewilding, Icelandic earth science research, and National Parks trekking trips.
Leadership Education Ecosystem.
The Big Curiosity Quest (Sophomore Year). The Big Curiosity Quest. Required for 10th grade students. Born in the spring of 2020 when Stone used the necessary pivot to distance learning to temporarily re-write our curriculum into an interdisciplinary inquiry-based experience, the BCQ is now a one-Mod research course where students are asked to respond to a single, interdisciplinary question in the form of public presentation and exhibition of synthesis. This course requires an intentional practice of being curious, an emphasis on process, and the ability to unpack difficult concepts.
Junior Workshop. Required for 11th grade students. The Junior Workshop is a two-Mod course for which eleventh-grade students create knowledge, insight, beauty and/or function by executing a project which arises out of their own passions. The project requires significant research, but a student’s product may not be a report on this knowledge: they must bring something new into the world. Students are evaluated on their original research, product design, and project management skills. Students must give a 15-minute presentation followed by a 15-minute Q&A from a Faculty Panel to complete the course.
Senior Defense. Required for 12th grade students. Senior Defense is a significant research project that serves as a synthesis of learning, and the defense of a student’s academic and intellectual growth during their time at Stone. Senior Defense is different from a capstone project in that a student is given a personalized question to which they respond in depth. Pre-advising for the question takes place from October to December, questions are sent in March, and in June students must deliver their final response during a 30-minute presentation, defending their process and “product”, followed by a 30-minute Q&A with a Faculty Panel.
Comprehensive, Multi-Year Entrepreneurial Thinking Program. The Stone Independent School is the first school in our region to offer a comprehensive, multi-year, entrepreneurial program. Students are required to take Entrepreneurial Thinking I & II, and they are expected to apply an “entrepreneurial mindset framework” to all challenges they encounter during their time at Stone. We ask them to recognize and act on opportunity, practice making decisions with limited information, and remain adaptable and resilient in conditions that are uncertain and complex.
Physics-First, Integrated Sciences Program. Our 9-11th science program is a physics-first, integrated sciences program, wherein students take physics, chemistry, and biology lab courses each year. Ninth-grade students also take a required science data and measurement course called Structured Curiosity.
Driven by feedback.

We design for and measure deep learning —anchored by competency-based assessment practices. Stone students are co-architects of their education.
“I got accepted!”
Colleges, Universities & Programs Admitting Stone Students
Expand below to explore our extensive list.
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Abertay University (Scotland)
Adelphi University
Allegheny College
American Musical and Dramatic Academy
American University
American University (Duel Bachelors/Master Program in Public Health)
American University (Honors Program)
American University (Public Health Scholars Program)
Arcadia University
Arizona State University
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Bard College
Barnard College
Bath Spa University (England)
Bennington College
Boston University (Kilachand Honors College)
Brandeis University
Bryn Mawr College
Bucknell University
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Carnegie Mellon University
Case Western Reserve University
Cedar Crest College
Champlain College
Clark University
Clarke University
College of the Atlantic
Colorado College
Connecticut College
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Delaware State University
Dickinson College
Drexel University
Drexel University (Honors Program)
Drexel University, BSMD Program
Duquesne University
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Eckerd College
Edinburgh Napier University (Scotland)
Elizabethtown College
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Falmouth University (England)
Fordham University
Franklin & Marshall College
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Macalester College
Maine Maritime Academy
Maryland Institute College of Art
Marywood University
Massachusetts Maritime Academy
McDaniel College
Mercyhurst University
Michigan State University
Millersville University
Monmouth University
Mount Holyoke College
Muhlenberg College
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New College of Florida
The New School
New York University (Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music)
New York University (Drama)
Northeastern University
Notre Dame of Maryland University
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Ohio State University
Ohio Wesleyan University
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Pace University
Penn State University
Penn State University — Harrisburg
Penn State University — Mont Alto
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Radford University
Reed College
Rhodes College
Rhode Island School of Design
Roanoke College
Robert Morris University
Rochester Institute of Technology
Rollins College (Early Advantage MBA)
Rollins College
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Sarah Lawrence College
Savannah College of Art and Design
Seton Hall University
Sewanee The University of the South
Shippensburg University
Siena College, BSMD Program
Skidmore College
Staffordshire University (England)
Stevens College of Technology
Suffolk University
SUNY Maritie Academy
SUNY College at Geneseo
Susquehanna University
Syracuse University (B.Architecture)
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Temple University
Temple University (Honors Program)
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Union College
United States Merchant Marine Academy
Unity College
University of Colorado -- Boulder
University of Delaware
University of Denver
University of Maine
University of Missouri
University of New England
University of New Hampshire
University of North Carolina (Honors Carolina)
University of Pittsburgh
University of Pittsburgh (Honors College)
University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg
University of Rhode Island
University of Rochester
University of Southern California (Thornton School of Music)
University of Southern California (Viterbi School of Engineering)
University of Tennessee
University of Vermont
University of Wisconsin
Ursinus College
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Valparaiso University (EIB - German)
Vassar College
Virginia Tech
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Wake Forest University
Warren Wilson College
Washington College
West Chester University
Whitman College
Whittier College
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
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Xavier University
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George Washington University
Guilford College
Goucher College
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Hamilton College
Hampton University
Hampshire College
Hobart William and Smith Colleges
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Illinois Institute of Technology
Ithaca College
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Johnson & Wales University
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Kean University
Kent State University
Kutztown University
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La Salle University
Lafayette College
Lawrence University
Lebanon Valley College
Lehigh University
Loyola Marymount University
Loyola University of Maryland
Loyola University of New Orleans (Honors College)
Lynchburg College