Independent Stories
THE STONE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL BLOG
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The Stone Independent School is a progressive, interdisciplinary 7-12 school which believes that all students learn best by doing.

Fall 2025: An Opening Letter to Our Middle School Parents
We are committed to growing well-rounded, engaged citizens who can analyze complex issues and make meaningful contributions to society and various professional fields — and that all starts Mod 1 in Middle School.

Lower School at Stone: Building critical thinkers and problem-solvers from the very beginning.
For years, our families have asked us when we would extend Stone’s model downward — when their younger children could benefit from the same kind of learning environment their older siblings were experiencing. We moved slowly, mostly because we wanted to be sure we had built something durable at the Middle and Upper School levels first.
We have seen the need more clearly to build downward, because we more clearly understand that if we want to prepare students not just for college but for life, if we want to build critical thinkers and problem-solvers from the very beginning, then we need to start earlier.

What is a Portrait of a Graduate?
“At Stone, we believe that education is more than a list of credits and a carefully curated college activities list. We believe that it’s just as important for a student to graduate feeling a sense of intellectual identity and selfhood as it is to be prepared for the demands and authentic assessment of the job force and prepared to thrive in a college setting without the safety nets of early adolescence. “

What Does Learning Look Like?
“Whenever I ask people in my life what learning looks like, I notice that I seem to get a certain kind of answer: ‘I know I’ve learned something when I can do it without help.’ ‘I know I’ve learned something when I can do it in front of other people.’ Or: ‘I know I’ve learned something when I can teach it to someone else.’ Or: “‘ know I’ve learned something when I can use that skill to make something new.’”

The Future of Work Is “Skills”
“There is near consensus on this perspective. In a 20023 Forbes magazine article titled, “From Jobs to Skills: What The Future of Work Will Look Like”, Matthew Daniel, Senior Principal at Guild, comments: “Skills have never mattered more...When employers hire based on skills, rather than things like degree requirements, they create a more diverse and tailored talent pool, driven by insights — which is absolutely necessary to keep up with the pace of change.”"