news." Day schools have been teaching Hebrew methodically, purposefully, devotedly for decades. The effort has not by any means always been easy, nor have results been consistent; but there is no comparable institution in Diaspora Jewish life so dedicated to raising so many Jewish youth with a strong knowledge of Hebrew. To help schools gain a catbird-seat appreciation of the Hebrew landscape, Prizmah decided to create a paper that maps out the main ways that schools seek to improve in this area. Are you familiar with panoramic photography, super-wide images than can capture even a 360-degree view of a place? Prizmah offers the equivalent for Jewish day schools. This is the first in a series of thought leadership papers, each offering a panoramic photo of a particular aspect of day school education and leadership. Here, we look at the reasons why Hebrew education is so central to day schools--and often so challenging. The paper considers six critical levers: staff, time, pedagogy, curriculum, assessment, and mission. Each lever starts with a guiding question and includes resources for further reading. Join the conversation! Check out responses to this paper on the Times of Israel blog and contribute your own thoughts there. After you have a chance to read this study, we want to hear from you! How would you like to use it? Is this format useful for you, and if so, what in particular? What would make it more useful? What conversations would you like to have with others in the field about Hebrew education? And, do you have subjects that you'd like to see written up into future papers? Please send feedback to Elliott Rabin at [email protected]. |