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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Bill Aron – Journal of Jewish Education, 2024
Over a period of 13 years, I taught a class in photography to high school students, using a taxonomy I developed based on my own understanding of what makes for excellence in photography. Five of the elements of this taxonomy are explained and illustrated by photographs taken by my students; I submit these as evidence of my success in this…
Descriptors: High School Students, Day Schools, Jews, Judaism
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Ziva R. Hassenfeld – Journal of Jewish Education, 2025
Using an original data set of task-based interviews, this paper presents findings on how Jewish day school students make sense of Biblical Hebrew verses in Biblical Hebrew. This paper pushes back against the convention in Jewish communal discourse to evaluate and label knowledge, shifting the focus instead to understanding how knowledge is…
Descriptors: Hebrew, Biblical Literature, Judaism, Day Schools
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Katz, Meredith – Journal of Jewish Education, 2022
This study investigates ideas about the messages of the Holocaust understood by middle school students in Jewish day schools. Findings explore the conceptualizations students have of the Holocaust as a particular Jewish experience, and in what ways they apply its lessons both particularly and universally. Students in two North American Jewish day…
Descriptors: Judaism, Day Schools, Death, European History
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Weiner, Cheryl – Journal of Jewish Education, 2020
What does it mean to be a Jewish girl today and how do Jewish adolescent girls navigate their identity? The study that I undertook is exploratory and designed to understand how three girls, who are recent day school graduates, experience the process of identity development as they begin high school. While the sample is small, the study reveals new…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Females, High School Students, Jews
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Samson, Maxim G. M. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2019
Faith schools are often perceived as restricting students' autonomy through inculcating a single religious ideology and compelling participation in collective worship. Based on interviews and focus groups with parents, students and senior staff, this article investigates how England's one pluralist Jewish secondary school has, in contrast,…
Descriptors: Judaism, Religious Education, Personal Autonomy, Religious Factors
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Gilead, Yona – Journal of Jewish Education, 2020
This article reports on students' and faculty members' experience of their pluralistic Jewish day school's educational mission to nurture students' Jewish identity exploration within a broader social and cultural world. It articulates these stakeholders' perceptions of the ways teaching and learning of Jewish values, customs, and knowledge are…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Judaism, Religious Education, Day Schools
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Hassenfeld, Ziva R.; Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2019
This article examines the ways that Jewish studies teachers think about their teaching. It analyzes data from a three month teacher study group in which teachers read educational research articles as a framework for reflecting on their own teaching. The data suggest that Jewish studies teachers take one of two approaches in talking about their…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Kerr, Rhonda Moore – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Students with emotional disturbances often present with internalizing behaviors, such as anxiety, and externalizing behaviors, such as verbally or physically aggressive behaviors, which lead to challenges establishing and maintaining satisfactory relationships with peers and adults. These challenging relationships also present unique disciplinary…
Descriptors: Bibliotherapy, Intervention, Psychoeducational Methods, Emotional Disturbances
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Gross, Zehavit; Rutland, Suzanne D. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2020
This qualitative study, examining seven communities in the globalized Asia Pacific area, aimed to investigate Jewish community attitudes toward Hebrew, their heritage language (HL), as influenced by the social environment. The main finding was that the "complex ecology" of context influences attitudes to Hebrew. The article delineates…
Descriptors: Judaism, Semitic Languages, Language Attitudes, Immigrants
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Train, Kelly Amanda – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2013
This article explores the North African Jewish community's establishment of Or Haemet Sephardic School as a response to the forced "Ashkenazification" of Sephardic students in the Orthodox Jewish day school system. The establishment of the school signifies the North African Jewish community's refusal and resistance to an essentialist…
Descriptors: Females, Jews, Day Schools, Judaism
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Morice, Linda C. – History of Education, 2012
This paper examines the role of place in the reform efforts of two teachers who established Miss White's Home School in Concord, Massachusetts (USA). Flora and Mary White rebelled against the prevailing industrial model of instruction in tax-supported schools where they taught. As a solution, they moved to Concord--a nonconformist town with a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Boarding Schools, Municipalities, Progressive Education
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Shargel, Rebecca – Journal of Jewish Education, 2012
This case study describes and analyzes a Jewish high school program that sought to integrate Judaic and general studies. The research focused on the question of how educators at the "Keshet" School understood curricular integration. Administrators and teachers ascribed a range of meanings to this topic. Administrators articulated a vision of…
Descriptors: School Activities, Jews, Educational Technology, Case Studies
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Gross, Zehavit; Rutland, Suzanne D. – Curriculum and Teaching, 2014
The aim of this paper is to investigate the role and place of Hebrew within the Australian Jewish day schools' curriculum and to analyse the cultural factors, which contribute to the challenges Hebrew teachers face. Our findings show that there is a need to locate Modern Hebrew more centrally within the schools' organizational structure. A…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Countries
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Avni, Sharon – Language Policy, 2012
This article ethnographically analyzes the everyday negotiations of a language policy at a private religious educational institution whose explicit educative mission is the transmission of religious beliefs, values, and practices. Specifically, it explores a Hebrew-only language policy at a Jewish day school located in New York City, and focuses…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Language Planning, Jews, Day Schools
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Schoem, David – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
David Schoem reflects on his research study from 30-plus years ago, published as "Ethnic Survival in America: An Ethnography of a Jewish Afternoon School" (1979, 1989). Schoem points to the continuing importance of giving greater focus to meaning-making, relational identity, and deep community. Schoem argues that through a renewed focus on…
Descriptors: Jews, Day Schools, Ethnography, Educational Researchers
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