Hebrew Academy: Looking Forward
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Friday, April 4, 2014
Akirat haShulchan: Rock the Seder
In Talmud’s Mashechet Pesachim (Chapter 10, page 115b), the
phrase okrin et ha-shulchan appears
once, as if its purpose was clear and uncontroversial. “V’ein okrin et ha-shulchan ela
lifnei me she omer hagemara” (and you only pluck -- uproot, eradicate,
extricate -- the table that is in front of the one reading the Haggadah). The sudden
act comes right before the four questions.
What!? Why!?
Picture the setting: The
full, rabbinic Passover seder, designed to resemble the free person’s banquets
of their own time, looks a lot like a Greco-Roman Symposium. Picture elegant people in comfortably draped
clothes lounging around on couches. Within easy arms’ reach of each person sits
a small table laden with food and wine. The hours-long event is filled with
singing, drinking, feasting, story-telling, and speaking at great length of local
gossip, world affairs, and the latest fad, philosophy.
While in Greek and Roman cultures the symposium was an adult
event of pure pleasure, the Jewish version has a different purpose: the transmission
to each generation of our people’s history of our movement from slavery to
freedom, as if it is current events. The
pleasures, the lounging, the food and wine, the singing, the games, the
lists, and the story-telling – these are not aimed at entertainment, they are
entertainment aimed at education. Today,
we would call it “edutainment”.
Commentators on the Gemara agree about why the seder leader’s
table (or in our times, the Seder Plate) should be suddenly yanked away just
before Ma Nishtanah and Maggid (the asking of the four questions
and the subsequent recitation of the story). The surprise and physicality of uprooting a key item draws children’s
attention to the proceedings and engages their curiosity just in time for the important
Q & A.
I believe that the rabbis’ point was to engage the children
as actively as possible, so that they don’t see the discussions and stories as the
adults’ domain. At your seder, you might consider engaging in akirat ha-shulckan, uprooting the Seder Plate,
but please do even more! By preparing
ahead, you can have at hand a line-up of physical, surprising, and fun
activities for the children. Bring each out
as it becomes relevant to the story and each time you see the youngsters’
attention drifting.
These websites have great free ideas and resources,
including many downloadable games. Remember, it’s all about attaching the next
generation to our shared narrative as if it is their own, which, of course, it
is!
Shabbat shalom and chag sameach!
Morah Rhonda
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Wisdom from Sweden
Ingvi Hrannar Omarsson, an educator, entrepreneur and
blogger earning an M.Sc. in educational technology at the University of Lund,
Sweden, posted the linked blog entry, "14 Things that are Obsolete in 21st Century Schools." It
is a concise, accessible summary of the direction in which we have begun moving
our school, and in which we must keep moving to become the premier 21st
century Jewish day school we’re aiming to be. Good fodder for discussion. Let's keep talking and planning together.
http://ingvihrannar.com/14-things-that-are-obsolete-in-21st-century-schools/
http://ingvihrannar.com/14-things-that-are-obsolete-in-21st-century-schools/
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
A Lifetime Reading Habit

This week, as we face both the hope of spring and the
likelihood of getting stuck at home yet again, thanks to a late winter snowstorm,
I offer you some web resources to help you nurture your children’s curiosity
and pleasure in reading.
What is the main goal of reading at home? To develop in each
child the habit of reading at home!
Reading should be a pleasurable daily experience, not a war of
wills. It should sometimes feel like sweet
solitude, and at other times, like a precious shared experience. Daily reading is not the time to insist your
child bone up on new vocabulary, to quiz him or her for recollection, or to
stretch beyond a comfort zone. Rather,
this is a time for engaging in relaxed imagination. Setting aside even ten minutes for quiet reading time helps establish the habit. All the better, by the way, if you take the same ten minutes to share the couch and enjoy some pleasure reading of your own.
How do you pick good books for your child, Books that will stimulate interest, are of literary value, and are just plain fun?
- Ask your child’s teacher. Your child’s teacher can give you the closest assessment of what level book your child can read independently, what level book s/he can read with adult assistance (called the “instructional level”), and what level book s/he can follow aurally when being read to. At home, independent and shared reading should be much more of a pleasure than an effort, so please take the teacher’s recommendations seriously. Striving far above a child’s comfort zone at home can lead to frustration and “flooding out,” which is when being overwhelmed looks just like being bored, both of which work against the goal of establishing a happy habit of daily reading.Teachers use different methods of helping students learn to choose books for themselves. Here’s one you can use at home. Ask your child to test whether a book they are interested in is at a “just right” level for them by applying the Five Finger Rule. Have your child open a page of the book, and start reading, and counting times they stumble on their fingers. If they stumble up to around three times, this may be a “just right” fit. Five or more may be a stretch for independent reading – so if they are just dying to read that book, please help them through it. While zero to one errors may signal a “too easy” read, reading very easy books provides a student opportunities to build confidence and fluency, as long as the child is enjoying the experience and is not bored.
- Look for award winners. Many organizations present annual awards for extraordinary children’s books. While the Newberry and Caldecott Medals are the best known of the bunch, many organizations put out annual “Best of” lists worth perusing. Don’t forget to look at past years’ lists as well – some stellar books have won their awards in the past! Here’s a gateway site from which you can start exploring: http://www.readingrockets.org/books/awardwinners .
- Don’t forget about graphic novels and comics, particularly for reluctant readers. Reading is reading: and your job at home is to encourage joyful and frequent reading. Here are a few resources: http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/5038.Best_Graphic_Novels_for_Children (This is reader generated); from School Library Journal, http://www.slj.com/2011/07/collection-development/comic-relief-thirty-nine-graphic-novels-that-kids-cant-resist/ ; and from the American Library Association, http://www.ala.org/alsc/graphicnovels2013.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
One Community, Many Denominations
Tomorrow afternoon through
Saturday night, one teenaged Hebrew Academy alumnus and I will be co-chaperoning the Middle School Shabbaton.
We are not retreating to a camp or staying in sleeping
bags at school. Quite the opposite, we are advancing into the area’s densest
Jewish neighborhood, where many of our students live. Taking up residence in three
families’ homes, we will be praying in one Orthodox and two Conservative synagogues,
eating Shabbat meals in two families’ houses and at one shul, studying with five
rabbis and a cantor, and, weather permitting, enjoying free time by the neighborhood
pond, a regular gathering place for Albany’s
Jews of all ages and denominations.
The Capital Region Jewish community is very special, in that
it is both big enough to support several large synagogues within blocks
of each other, and small enough so that Jews behave as one close-knit, Jewish
community. People commonly meet members of various shuls at each other’s communal
dinners and events. All of Albany’s
congregations walk to Buckingham Pond for the Taschlich ceremony and
festivities on Rosh Hashanah. The local Board of Rabbis includes clergy
ordained in more than six different rabbinical seminaries.
At Hebrew
Academy, students study,
play, and pray with Orthodox, Reform, Conservative, Renewal, Reconstructionist,
Traditional, and secular classmates. Their families’ varied modes of Jewish
engagement and observance are respected by the teachers and through the
curriculum. Such diversity often complicates school policies. Yet, with families
proud of being part of this community of difference, Hebrew Academy
gratefully works through those complications to craft an educational
environment that affirms each family’s choices.
These Middle School students are excited to meander from
shul to shul together this Shabbat, learning about the different movements while
strengthening their connections with each other as members of one Jewish community.
Shabbat shalom!
Q: How does kashrut work at Hebrew Academy?
A: Hot lunches and all other cooked meals and snacks prepared
in the school’s kitchen are subject to supervision by the Va’ad Hakashrut of the Capital District. Several staff members serve as agents of the
Va’ad, supervising daily operations such as checking packaged foods for hecshers
(seals of various kosher certification-granting organizations) acceptable to
the Va’ad, and attending to all kashrut requirements. Children may bring snacks and meals from home that
are dairy or pareve (neither milk nor meat), and because students’ home
kashrut standards vary, no sharing of food is permitted.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
Choice, Accountability & Academic Excellence: How Projects Work

Many Hebrew Academy primary and elementary students choose to work on projects during their student choice time. A project, in multiage methodology, is a medium-to long-term educational effort chosen, defined, shaped, researched, created, and presented to peers by students. The learning is often multi-modal and the presentation often multi-media.
Broad project ideas emerge from the overall theme of classroom learning, with an initial list resulting from a brainstorming session. Students may declare their interest in working on one of the ideas solo or with others. While students lead the projects, teachers take many opportunities to guide their efforts. On any given day, teachers may encourage any of the following: clearer articulation of a project goal; more exact planning; a shift in perspective; exploration of new data sources; and refinement of the presentation. Peers are also daily sources of new ideas and creative solutions.
Student-led projects are different from assignments related to direct instruction. Regarding projects, a child may but need not sign up to work on one. Having signed up for a project, she may but need not work on it on any particular day. The principle of choice goes so far as to allow that if he loses interest, he may but need not complete a project.
How could it be, then, that projects promote personal accountability and academic rigor? Here’s how it works:
1. Student choice ignites a child’s intrinsic motivation to learn. As with adults, the more “into” something a child is, the more focused effort the child will put into it. With high motivation, great focus and effort, and regular consultation with both teacher and peers, a student’s learning is propelled well past basic expectations.
2. Because of the opt-out option, children feel fully in charge when sticking with a project. With the teacher’s help, students reflect on their capacities and internal drive. They learn to generate their own goals, actively interact with concrete materials, tools, and resources, and make sense of their experiences. They learn what it feels like to put one’s whole self into a project, and later in life, into any demanding task, effort or job. With each project chosen and pursued, children practice acting on their internal drive and using their full capacity. Putting one’s whole self in feels good and becomes a lifelong habit of mind and heart.
3. The accountability of a project is first to one’s own learning and second to teammates and teacher. This promotes a habit of personal accountability that will serve our students throughout their lifetimes, for instance, when studying for cumulative high school exams, in the classes of less-than-stimulating college professors, when writing a dissertation or starting an entrepreneurial venture, and when parenting their own children.
4. Taking advantage of the motivation, effort, and focus of a project, teachers prompt students to meet a high standard of academic excellence with great success; no attitudinal barriers stand in the way! Every skill students learn during direct instruction can be honed sharply during consultations around a project.
To
thrive in their 21st century world, our graduates will need to:
Q. What if my child does not want to pursue a project -- should someone insist?
A. If a student is not ready to throw his or herself into the long, focused commitment to a project, the best course is to continue to build her/his skills, knowledge and confidence through direct instruction and learning centers. The teacher will continually watch for opportunities to stimulate curiosity and gently encourage the first steps toward that commitment. Seeing peers take that leap will also help. Hoisting a project on a student erodes the very foundation of its "magic." Without the internal drive, the work will become externally focused, and the student will not get to experience the thrill of self-propulsion.
- tap into their own talents and interests,
- hold themselves accountable for an excellent result,
- leverage the knowledge, wisdom and perspectives of others,
- and put their whole selves into the work they are doing, and the different work they will be doing after that, and the yet-again different work they will be doing after that.
Q. What if my child does not want to pursue a project -- should someone insist?
A. If a student is not ready to throw his or herself into the long, focused commitment to a project, the best course is to continue to build her/his skills, knowledge and confidence through direct instruction and learning centers. The teacher will continually watch for opportunities to stimulate curiosity and gently encourage the first steps toward that commitment. Seeing peers take that leap will also help. Hoisting a project on a student erodes the very foundation of its "magic." Without the internal drive, the work will become externally focused, and the student will not get to experience the thrill of self-propulsion.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Math and Me and Q&A
This is a story about math and me. There’s
a physics story that goes with it; I’ll tell that one another day.
It
was the 70s. I collected frogs (not real ones). I wore denim overalls with a tiny teddy bear peeking out of the bib
pocket, walked barefoot in the halls, and listened to Cat
Stevens, Dan Fogelberg and Renaissance. I wrote maudlin, historically-set stories.
When I entered jr. high school, it was determined with scientific
objectivity that I was average in math. Advanced in other subjects, but average
in math. From that determination forward, public school very nearly prevented
me from ever understanding mathematics.
Average meant I was assigned to “B track” classes and “B track”
students got the system’s most blasé teachers. In our progressive, upper middle
class, suburban public school, “A track” classes got the shining stars and “C
track” got the never-give-up-on-a-student heroes.
First there was Inverted-Camel-Man (ICM). He reeked of sour body
odor and breath. Poor ICM! Once, he pushed out his protuberant belly and popped
a button that pinged like breaking glass all the way across the silent room. I don’t remember what subject
he taught.
Then came two years of teachers so skilled and interesting that I
can bring nothing about them or their subjects to mind.
Finally, there was Mostly-Deaf-Burn-Out-Man (MDBOM), who always—but
always—faced the blackboard rather than the students. Trails of cigarette smoke
followed MDBOM from his office to the classroom. He was the one who
answered, “Because you have a test on Friday,” when I asked why we were
learning long geometry proofs. MDBOM became my last math teacher, until
my last summer at university.
Before we head off to my alma mater, SUNY-Binghamton, I must tell
you that in both jr. and sr. high school, I was a B+/A- student in math, and I got a 93% on the NYS Regents Geometry Exam.
Riviera Ridge Apartments, Vestal, NY. I still collected frogs and wore
overalls. By now, I was into ELO, Led Zeppelin, The Who, Queen, and the Police,
and I had accidentally fallen in love with Donna Summer and – horrors! – disco. In
order to graduate from SUNY-Binghamton, I needed one math class. I signed up
for it during summer session.
Day one. My jaw was clicking; I barely slept the night before. In walks my first math teacher in five
years: a nun. A nun! A nun teaching Algebra/Trig. Oy. So, when the sister asked for questions,
up shot my hand. “Why do I need to learn this?"
“I’m guessing that you are not an engineering
student, or computer or hard science student, right?” She waited for
me to nod ascent.
Nod.
“Then the truth is that you won't need it. Is the real answer that you are learning this because you
need these credits to graduate?” Wait.
Nod.
“Do you like crossword puzzles?” she asked.
“Yes,” I answered. What an odd question!
“So, you enjoy thinking for fun.”
“Yes.”
“What about this, then? What if you think about what we’re doing
here just the way you think about completing crossword puzzles? Pretend it’s
fun and see how it goes.” Wait.
Confused stare. Head tilt.
“Can you try it?”
“I guess….”
“Good,” she nodded. “Next question?”
That June, I spent many happy hours drinking iced tea or Genny Cream
Ale, and “doing” math as if I was doing a crossword puzzle. When I didn’t get
something, Sister Anne explained it, or had a classmate explain it. Patiently. Again
and again as needed. Once, I even got to explain a point to another student. Through some holy alchemy of attitude, kindness and connection, not only did I
ace the class, I actually understood the math.
As I became an educator, I learned more about math and me. For instance,
had someone noticed that I “got” English syntax and grammar, s/he could have built
a bridge from that strength over my confusion:
(X2 x Y)
+ 32 = 12. This is a sentence. (“I understand
sentences!”) It is broken into phrases or clauses (“I can see them”) that
include nouns (“There they are”), verbs (“Of course”), and modifiers (“I
totally get that”).
Instead, I relied on my memory to “earn”
respectable grades while understanding little of value, and deciding that I was mysteriously
stupid at math.
While I loved getting good grades in other subjects, in math classes, decent grades
were my defiant refusal to be crushed. (“Watch, mom, I will ace this class and
the Regents. Then I will never take another math class in my life.”) I knew that
I had no clue what any of it meant. And while I refused to let others see me
fail, I believed deeply in the mathematical stupidity that my good grades masked.
That is, until a kind, patient and wise teacher broke through my certainty of
failure and found a way to invite success.
Q. Without grades,
how do you measure my child’s achievement?
A. Hebrew Academy teachers
use recognized standards of achievement to assess your child’s progress and to determine
what s/he needs to work on next. Where they are available, such as in Math and
Language Arts, we hold ourselves and your child accountable to the Common Core Standards.
For Spanish, Hebrew, Social Studies, and Science, we look to culminating Regents
and other high school level exams or expectations, to set challenging goals. In Judaic Studies, we have developed our own standards, under Judaic
Studies Dean Julie Pollack’s leadership, and we are always raising the
bar.
There has been much controversy about the Common Core in
public schools. The debate is rarely about the standards themselves, but rather
about how the state is deciding to test everyone (read: more standardized
tests) and how it determines when all children of a given grade are considered accountable for certain material.
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