
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
6 Years After Katrina

Sunday, August 28, 2011
Surviving the 1st Month of School: 20+ Tips & Resources
Surviving the 1st Month of School: 20+ Tips & Resources
Please email me other sites or links that you would like to share with our teaching staff.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Parenting: Why What We Do At Home and the Decisions We Make Matter
"And You Shall Teach Them Dilligently To Your Children ... And To Yourselves."
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Diligence (Charitzut): Caroline Wozniacki, 2009
In its short history thus far, 6 Points has done many things right. Their Jewish values approach is high on that list. In my opinion, they also need to develop opportunities to delve deeper into these and other Jewish subjects, but that will come with time and more experience. For example, I have always felt that since camp takes place during the summer, they should show the movie "Operation Thunderbolt" about the Entebbe raid which happened in the summer of 1976.
Every so often, I stumble upon a video that, like those we saw this summer, perfectly captures the values highlighted at 6 Points. When I do, I will post them to the blog.
The value: Charitzut (diligence)
Sport: Women's Tennis
Subject: Caroline Wozniacki
September 2, 2011 – Forward.com
Balancing Sports and Life
I am reposting this article from the Jewish Daily Forward - an important message to all who play sports or have kids who play sports.
"September 2, 2011
Looking Back
Read more: http://forward.com/articles/141855/#ixzz1W2tmiaTG
There has always been a strong connection between Jews and baseball. In this excerpted editorial from August 6, 1903, Forverts Editor Ab Cahan offers some advice on the subject to a confounded father.
A father writes to ask advice about baseball. He thinks that baseball is a foolish and wild game. But his boy, who is already in the upper grades, is very eager to play. He’s not the only one. The majority of our immigrants have the same idea about it. They express it in such a way that it’s possible to see how the parents in the Yiddish neighborhood generally feel about baseball.
“It is said that one should teach their child how to play chess or checkers or goat & wolf [tsig un volf] or at least a game that sharpens the mind. That would be appreciated,” writes the father in his letter. “But what value does a game like baseball have? Nothing more than becoming crippled comes out of it. When I was a young boy we used to play ‘rabbits’ chasing and catching one another. But when we got older we stopped playing. Imagine a big boy in Russia playing tag, we would have treated him like he was crazy. And here in this highly educated America, adults play baseball! They run after the stupid ball made of hide and are as excited about it as little boys. I want my boy to grow up to be a mentsh not a wild American runner. He’s making me miserable, I can’t take it anymore.”**
This part of the letter captures the point of the question posed by the boy’s father. And the writer of this article has but one answer:
Let your boys play baseball and even become outstanding players as long as it doesn’t interfere with their studies and doesn’t put them in bad company.
For more on Jews and sports, including the full version of the editorial above; Douglas Stark blogging on basketball’s greatest team, and ‘Lions of Zion,’ an original novel about baseball serialized on The Arty Semite, visit www.forward.com/the-arty-semite."
Saturday, August 20, 2011
What Should Be Our Focus? - Hunger and Homelessness
http://www.news-record.com/content/2011/08/19/article/editorial_persistent_poverty
Editorial: Persistent poverty
Saturday, August 20, 2011
(Updated 3:00 am)
Nearly one in four children in North Carolina lives in poverty and the number keeps growing.
They are the youngest casualties of the Great Recession's double-whammy of unemployment and housing foreclosures.
And the homelessness and hunger that often follow could have a lasting impact.
A study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation estimates that foreclosures have disrupted the lives of 90,000 children in the state. Another 250,000 have been hurt by one or both of their parents losing a job.
While the survey showed some progress with more children staying in school and fewer teens giving birth, the bleak economy gave our state one of the highest poverty rates in the nation. Adding pain to that misery is a new report on hunger that lists Winston-Salem as the worst metro area in the U.S. for the number of families struggling to feed their children (nearly 35 percent). Greensboro-High Point placed 17th at 28.4 percent.
When schools open next week, meals served in the cafeteria may be the best, and perhaps only food some will get all day. In many Triad schools, more than half of the students receive free or reduced-price meals.
That more are staying in school is encouraging because educating them for tomorrow's workforce is central to breaking poverty's stranglehold. Slashing school budgets and withholding funding for at-risk kids may seem the expedient thing to do, but it will have a lasting, costlier outcome.
Instead, there must be more emphasis on public education as a way out of poverty. That means identifying and mentoring children unable to keep pace with their peers. It means adequately funding the state's pre-school program. And it means helping parents better cope during hard times to hold families together.
The Rev. Mike Aiken, executive director of Urban Ministries, says the vast majority at his emergency shelter are families. And officials with the Second Harvest Food Bank, which delivers food to 18 Piedmont counties, told the Winston-Salem Journal that its shelves often are bare. The more fortunate among us can help by contributing money, food and time to any of the numerous community agencies and churches that provide assistance to people in need.
Unfortunately, hungry families may not be using all available resources. State officials say that about 500,000 North Carolinians who are eligible for the federal food stamps program have not applied. Enrolling might bring at least temporary relief.
Most importantly, politicians in Washington and Raleigh who talk a good game on job creation need to back it up with action.
Educating our young and putting the hard-core unemployed back to work are the best ways to fight poverty.
Friday, August 19, 2011
New book explores one of the shapers of American Jewish education
http://forward.com/articles/141660/
I have included the complete article below:
"How One Man Shaped American Jewish Education
By Barry W. Holtz
The Benderly Boys and American EducationBy Jonathan Krasner
Brandeis University Press, 496 pages, $95
In the early years of the 20th century, Samson Benderly stood with the legendary figures of American Jewish life: He was recruited to New York by Judah Magnes; he knew Henrietta Szold and Barnett Brickner; he battled Solomon Schechter; he met regularly with his benefactor, Jacob Schiff, and his closest friend was Mordecai Kaplan. Indeed, Kaplan wrote of Benderly, “He is to me the most positive force in Jewish life today.”
Benderly, more than any other single individual, shaped the institutions of American Jewish education that we know today; but aside from historians of American Jewry and scholars of Jewish education, his name is virtually unknown. Now, Jonathan Krasner, an assistant professor of American Jewish history at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, has produced “The Benderly Boys and American Jewish Education” (Brandeis University Press, 2011), a prodigious and clear portrait of Benderly and his world.
It is not an exaggeration to say that this volume is the most important piece of historical writing about American Jewish education to have appeared in a generation. Although many fine scholars have written about various aspects of Jewish education in America, no one until now has taken such a comprehensive view of it. Krasner’s book delves deeply into the crucial period of the field — the 20th century — and contextualizes the history of American Jewish education both within Jewish life and within modern education. The wonderful collection of photographs on display throughout the book adds to its charm.
Benderly, born into a traditional Hasidic family in Safed, arrived in America in 1898 from Palestine. Though he came to Baltimore for medical studies, he was drawn to Jewish teaching and eventually left medicine to become an educator.
Benderly was a visionary and was capable of inspiring others to follow his vision. He developed around him a group of remarkable young people who shared his excitement about changing the face of American Jewish education. These were the “boys” of the book’s title: Alexander Dushkin, Isaac Berkson, Emanuel Gamoran and many others. Krasner also points out the importance of a group of “Benderly girls” (such as Rebecca Aaronson Brickner and Libbie Suchoff Berkson), many of whom had important careers in Jewish education, though most of them did not go into the work of institutional leadership, which was more characteristic of male career paths at the time. An excellent companion to this book, therefore, is the 2010 book “The Women Who Reconstructed American Jewish Education, 1910–1965” (Brandeis). Edited by Carol Ingall, it comprises portraits of influential female Jewish educators.
When Benderly began his work, Jewish education was a hodgepodge of disorganized institutions, profoundly incompetent teachers, nonexistent textbooks and undefined curricula. Studies were often conducted in “dilapidated, dark, stuffy, and often filthy conditions.” Benderly’s main mission was to organize, modernize and Americanize Jewish education. He was, despite his traditional upbringing, a cultural Jew, and he saw Jewish education in the light of Ahad Ha’am’s Zionist dream and his focus on Jewish peoplehood. Therefore, Benderly placed a strong emphasis on Hebrew-language acquisition, with a focus on the Hebrew of the modern world, not that of the synagogue and traditional texts. It was Benderly more than anyone else who promoted the “natural method” in Hebrew education, using the approach that has characterized the ulpan, or Hebrew language school, in Israel and “immersion” techniques in foreign language learning today that have a strong emphasis on conversation and comprehension in real-life situations. In addition, Benderly introduced “technology” into Jewish education, developing magic-lantern (an early type of image projector) slides to use in instruction on Jewish holidays and the Bible. (If he were alive today, it would be fair to assume that he would be promoting social media and the Internet as means for Jewish education.)
Benderly also insisted on a system for training and accrediting teachers. He wanted to apply the findings of educational “science” (what we today would call “research”) to Jewish education. And he strove to create an organized, centralized system of support for, and supervision of, Jewish education, dealing with curricula, standard hours and classroom environments. He also understood the importance of the “informal” aspects of education, and one of his disciples, Albert Schoolman, was the prime mover in creating what is arguably the greatest and most original contribution of American Jewish education: the summer educational camp. All this flowed from Benderly and his followers.
Although many of Benderly’s dreams were not fully realized, Jewish education came onto the agenda of the leadership of the American Jewish community through his efforts and those of his followers. And, if nothing else, in recent years the discussion about Jewish education has become even more prominent than ever before.
Krasner’s book is precise in documenting some of the enduring problems of Jewish education, highlighting, in Benderly’s time, some of the same issues that still haunt us today: the quality and training of teachers; the tension between students’ secular education and their Jewish education; the environment in the home and its support or lack of support for Jewish education; the eternal funding issues at the communal level; the battle over Hebrew language; the complicated relationship between Jewish community federations and Jewish education. “The Benderly Boys,” therefore, is essential preparation for seeing how we came to where we are today, for both good and ill.
Although Krasner’s work focuses on what is arguably the core narrative of 20th-century American Jewish educational history, there are many aspects of the story that the volume was not able to address — themes and events that await other works of scholarship. Education in Orthodox and Haredi communities are examples, as those worlds grapple with issues related to the education of women and to “elite” versus “folk” education. Another unaddressed event is the growth of day schools, particularly outside the Orthodox world. The book does not cover adult Jewish learning or the growth of Israeli education as a field and a focus.
Although Krasner looks at the beginnings of the communal and organizational side of Jewish education in the 20th century, no historian has comprehensively studied what has happened over the past two decades to the very system that Benderly and his boys helped create: the centralized, communitywide agencies responsible for Jewish education, whose role and function have changed radically. A striking indicator is the several name changes that have occurred: What started as the The Bureau of Education of the New York Jewish Community — the agency Benderly came to New York to create — is now, after several name changes, the Jewish Education Project. The sense of stability and authority conveyed by “bureau” has now evolved into something as ephemeral as a “project.” And the official-sounding imprimatur of “New York” (as if it was almost a quasi-governmental agency) has completely vanished. This alone says a great deal about the changes in the structure of American Jewish education today.
Finally, Krasner’s focus on the personalities of Benderly and his followers makes one long for biographical scholarship about other great figures of Jewish education whose work has not been well documented, including such individuals as Shlomo Bardin (founder of the Brandeis Camp Institute), Louis Newman (founding principal of the former Akiba Hebrew Academy in Philadelphia, among many other accomplishments) and my own teacher, Seymour Fox, both a thinker and an institution builder, quite possibly the person closest in charisma and vision to Benderly that I have ever met.
“The Benderly Boys and American Jewish Education” is an outstanding work of scholarship. It has a strong narrative drive, yet captures the big themes beyond a mere recitation of facts. Superbly documented and compelling, this work establishes Krasner as the leading historian of American Jewish education for the present generation. I eagerly look forward to what he will produce next and what his work may inspire in other scholars.
Barry W. Holtz is dean of the William Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education and the Theodore and Florence Baumritter professor of Jewish education at The Jewish Theological Seminary."