Academics | Stanford Online High School Academics Our Stanford OHS courses engage students in advanced academic content, fostering critical reasoning and persuasive argumentation, strengthening oral and written communication skills, and promoting intellectual maturity and personal responsibility. Curriculum Curriculum Core Sequence Course Requirements Graduation Requirements Middle School Malone Schools Network FAQ Overview At every course level, students and teachers delve into materials at a depth and with a rigor indicative of Stanford University—standards rarely found outside of a university setting. Designed and taught by scholarly instructors who are experienced in their fields, our courses model the professional methods, skills, norms, and intellectual habits of each subject, and each academic subject culminates in post-AP and university-level courses. Science Work with the central concepts of hypothesis formation, experimentation, and analysis. Mathematics, Computer Science, Economics Focus on problem solving and logic. Analyze how texts create meaning at the level of the word, the phrase, the sentence, and the paragraph or verse. History Evaluate theses presented by a spectrum of scholars and formulate one of your own. Languages Explore culture, literature, and history in addition to the basics of vocabulary and grammar. Philosophy Develop a range of analytical and philosophical skills that can be applied broadly in both academic and public reasoning. Our Curriculum The Stanford OHS curriculum goes beyond the norm of satisfying admissions standards at top colleges and universities around the world. It prepares students to excel at those institutions and to make a smooth transition into working in those demanding academic environments while encouraging intellectual risk-taking and life-long learning. Distinctive Courses Stanford Online High School (Stanford OHS) offers unique and advanced online courses designed to challenge students well beyond the traditional high school level. With more than 40 college-prep and early college-level courses, the school allows students to explore subjects rarely offered elsewhere. Download Our School Profile Life in the Cosmos Life in the Cosmos is an interdisciplinary course that explores the question of what life will look like beyond planet Earth. The topic is considered both from the perspective of human life in the cosmos (i.e. manned space exploration Introduction to Quantum Computing Introduction to Quantum Computing is a two-semester course at Stanford OHS that covers various areas related to harnessing quantum mechanics to improve the efficiency of certain types of computation. What is quantum computing? It was Legal Studies - Constitutional Law Stanford OHS alums often cite the Constitutional Law final as a formative experience. Students start the year studying civil rights as they pertain to youth, separations of powers under the U.S. Constitution, and free speech under the Data Science In a world in which it is possible to amass large quantities of data, it becomes necessary to have tools that separate the signal from the noise. In Data Science , students are introduced to a variety of algorithms and statistical Object Oriented Programming & Design Object Oriented Programming & Design takes an interdisciplinary approach to computer science, guiding Stanford OHS students to learn how computation can be and is applied across diverse fields of study. Along the way, students gain a Revolutions & Rebellions What’s unique about studying history at Stanford OHS? Our history courses emphasize the act of interpreting the past, inviting students to develop skills and habits of thought that enable them to examine and make sense of human and Latin Prose & Poetry Most advanced Latin courses have students reading from editions made by scholars. Stanford OHS’s capstone Latin seminar has students making new editions entirely. In this course, students use the accumulated knowledge of their previous The Geometry of Numbers At Stanford OHS, advanced mathematics is not a set of formulas to memorize—it is a living conversation. Our courses invite students to explore open-ended questions, construct examples and counterexamples, and engage in proof writing Canon & Counter-Canon How do we decide, in an English class, what to read in the first place? That is the question at the heart of this early college-level course, taught by instructor Ben Wiebracht. Students explore the canon of nineteenth-century British The Core Sequence Our four-year interdisciplinary Core Sequence equips our students with exceptional skills in careful reading, thoughtful evaluation of data, critical thinking, and oral and written argumentation. Core Methodology of Science - Biology Using biology for context, this course introduces students to scientific reasoning, statistical analysis, and philosophical thinking. Core History and Philosophy of Science Using a historical case-study method, students examine the interplay between observations of the physical world, attempts to explain those observations, and the methods used to test the resulting explanations. Core Democracy, Freedom, Justice, and the Law Drawing on both historical and theoretical materials, students study changing conceptions of how political states should be organized. Core Critical Reading and Argumentation Students explore philosophical thinking about modes of reasoning as well as core philosophical discussions of religious concepts, the nature and limits of knowledge, the nature and content of ethics, and the mind’s relation to the world. EXPLORE OUR COURSE CATALOG Academic Course Requirements Students must take an equivalent of 20 full-year courses, or 200 units, meeting the specifications below. As part of these requirements, students must enroll in one Core class each high-school year to receive an OHS diploma. English: 4 years / 40 units Languages: 2 years / 20 units of the same language; 3 or more years strongly recommended Mathematics: 4 years / 40 units Social Sciences: 3 years / 30 units, including 1 year of U.S. History Natural Sciences: 3 years / 30 units, including at least 2 years of laboratory science Additional Coursework: 4 years / 40 units, which may include courses from the areas noted here or from Film Studies, Music, and Art Graduation Requirements Our graduation requirements demonstrate how bringing together a Core Sequence program, discipline-appropriate training, advanced coursework beyond the AP-level, high expectations, and thoughtful feedback creates an innovative, integrated curriculum. LEARN MORE ABOUT GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS Middle School At the Stanford OHS Middle School, students are in the company of equally passionate peers and receive academic support to ensure a smooth transition to the high school level. Middle School Program Courses A comprehensive curriculum, including advanced courses in English, Mathematics, Science, Languages (Latin and Chinese), Computer Science, History, and Core is key to the success of our Middle School. The courses are taught by the same instructors who teach our high-school courses but are targeted to serve the unique developmental needs of middle school students. Middle School Program Access to High School Level Courses Middle school students are placed according to abilities, not grade, and can take higher-level courses from our high school program. Middle School Program Summer @ Stanford Our Middle School Summer @ Stanford program has been a huge success since its inception in 2014. This annual 10-day program brings 40 middle school students to the Stanford University campus each August. LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR MIDDLE SCHOOL Malone Schools Online Network Stanford OHS students can join peers nationwide in rigorous online courses offered through this consortium of independent schools supported by the Malone Family Foundation. LEARN MORE ABOUT THE MALONE SCHOOLS ONLINE NETWORK Academics FAQ Frequently Asked Questions for Academics How do grade levels work at Stanford OHS? Show Hide Students' grade levels are set by their graduation year, regardless of which courses they are taking. Can students in grades 7–8 take high school courses? Show Hide Students in grades 7–8 occasionally place into a high school level Stanford OHS course. A placement test will determine a middle school student's readiness to take a high-school level class. This is more common in mathematics than in other academic divisions, where it is rare. Please note that middle school students may not take high school Core or English courses. How are lab experiments carried out at Stanford OHS? Show Hide Students complete labs at home using commonly available materials or lab kits sent to students' homes. What is the school’s approach to offering AP courses? Show Hide The Stanford OHS curriculum offers advanced coursework in all academic disciplines. As a school we have replaced a number of our AP courses with courses designed for Stanford OHS students. These courses have been very well-received by colleges and universities, and, based on this success, we will phase out all AP courses by Fall 2024. Students are able to take AP Exams even if they are enrolled in a different, non-AP course at a comparable level. Students will need to register for and take AP Exams at a local school. What if students don’t place into the specific course they want to take? Show Hide Our placement tests are carefully calibrated to make sure students are placed into courses in which they will thrive. If you did not place into the course you want to take, consider taking the course recommended by your academic advisor in the same subject or in a related one. If you have questions about your placement, your academic advisor can put you in contact with the relevant division head. What is your attendance policy? Show Hide Students are expected to be present and participate actively in each live class meeting for each discussion section in which the student is enrolled. Students are also expected to attend the specific section in which they are enrolled, as doing so is part of building a strong classroom community. As part of preserving this classroom community, parents/guardians may not sit in on their student’s classes. Instructors keep a close eye on student attendance and engagement, and our student support staff address lapses quickly before they undermine a student’s experience and education. Students who miss more than 20% of the discussion sessions per semester (once enrolled in the course) may not receive credit for the semester. All absences count toward this total.