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An increasing amount of people seek information on Jewish theology, Jewish
boarding schools, and online
Jewish education. Many universities offer Hebrew classes, so be
sure and check the university closest to you. More than likely if they offer
it they will also make it available online. Here is a great website regarding Jewish education.
If you are looking for information on Jewish high schools read the
article below to find out more.
Non-Orthodox boarding school will be a first in U.S.
JULIE WIENER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
NEW YORK -- In most North American Jewish day schools, fund-raising is a major
source of concern -- and the halls are lined with plaques honoring large donors.
But at a Jewish high school slated to open in 2001 in North Carolina, all the
bills have already been paid by a small group of donors who have taken Maimonides'
principles to heart: They are giving anonymously.
The American Hebrew Academy's unusual financial situation is not the only thing
that will distinguish it from other Jewish schools.
Located on 100 wooded acres in the donors' small Jewish community of Greensboro,
N.C., the academy will be North America's first non-Orthodox Jewish boarding
school. It expects to draw students from both North America and overseas.
The mission of this coeducational institution, which describes itself as "liberal" and "pluralistic," is
to "produce young adults whose strength of character and Jewish identity
become lifelong resources for personal growth, commitment to the creative continuity
of the Jewish people and the improvement of the world in which we live."
Rabbi Alvin Mars, the American Hebrew Academy's headmaster, said the school
will be "the ultimate day high school -- an all-day, all-week, all-school-year
school."
Mars, whose 30-year career in Jewish education includes years as a headmaster
of a Conservative day school in Philadelphia and director of the Conservative
movement's Camp Ramah in Ojai, said the academy's Judaic and secular curriculum
will be similar to those at many other new pluralistic day high schools proliferating
around the country.
However, it will be distinctive in its "total education" environment,
he said. The school community will celebrate Shabbat together, and faculty
members will live on campus.
While funding is set, the school is very much in the beginning stages.
Campus construction -- the first phase of which will cost $40 million to $50
million -- has just started. No teachers have been hired yet and recruitment
efforts are just starting, although the school has an extensive Web site at www.americanhebrewacademy.org
Tuition has not been determined, but Mars says scholarships will be available
so that "meritorious students will not be precluded from attending because
of financial need."
The original impetus for creating the school came less out of a desire for
a boarding school, and more the need for a high school option for students
in Greensboro's pluralistic Jewish elementary school, said Mars.
That school, B'nai Shalom Day School, enrolls 190 children through eighth grade
-- too few students to sustain a high school.
Living in a city with only 1,200 Jewish families and two synagogues -- one
Conservative, one Reform -- leaders in Greensboro's Jewish community say
they are looking forward to the influx of more Jews, both faculty and students,
that the new school promises.
Susan Cook, the head of B'nai Shalom, said there has been "a buzz" in
the community about the American Hebrew Academy and that families enrolling
children in the younger grades of her school now are "very excited" about
the prospect of having a place to continue studying after eighth grade.
Marilyn Forman-Chandler, executive director of the Greensboro Jewish Federation,
said she is "thrilled" to see the school come to the community and
hopes it will bring committed Jewish families to Greensboro.
Forman-Chandler said she is familiar with the school's primary donor,
who does not contribute to the federation, but has supported -- also
anonymously
--
most of the other local Jewish institutions.
Rabbi Daniel Lehmann, the president of a recently formed national association
of pluralistic day high schools and the headmaster of the New Jewish
High School of Greater Boston, said the American Hebrew Academy is
an "interesting
idea."
"
The concept of a Jewish high school that creates a total living environment
like at camps is a very powerful model and needs to be explored and refined," Lehmann
said. "This is a great opportunity to do that."
However, Lehmann noted that "there are all kinds of problems in running
boarding schools."
Among families who opt to send their children away to boarding
school there is "always a percentage of those kids and families who are in some kind
of crisis," Lehmann said, adding, "That's going to be a challenge.
But a lot of non-Jewish boarding schools deal with those challenges successfully."
Lehmann also suggested that, with day schools around the country
facing a shortage of educators, it may be difficult to attract
faculty willing
to
live on campus
and in a relatively small Jewish community.
Dismissing that concern, Mars said the project, due to its
innovative nature and opportunity for educators to create
a campus community
together, would
be a "magnet" for educators.
"
This is one of the most exciting things that I think has happened in the Jewish
education world in a long time," he said.
This information, and more information, can be found at www.jewishsf.com.
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