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Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2023
In their new study, Benji Davis and Hanan Alexander propose a conceptual taxonomy of six types of Israel education. But it is not at all clear that the different types of Israel education are associated with different pedagogies, or indeed, whether they are significantly distinct from each other. Davis and Alexander also propose their own version…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Jews
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
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2017
We frequently encounter the claim that a particular Jewish educational experience will be "transformative" for the participants. The language may be hyperbole. But it may also point to educators' aspirations to affect not just knowledge and practice but character and identity. In order to understand this phenomenon--not the phenomenon of…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Educational Experience, Jews, Judaism
Levisohn, Jon A. – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2013
Education and assimilation seem intimately connected; education either supports assimilation or thwarts it. But these paradigms assume a model of cultural vitality that depends on what one scholar aptly terms "tenacious adherence," over time, to an unchanging cultural or religious tradition. Taking the example of the Jewish community and Jewish…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Religious Education, Acculturation
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
This article extends the conversation begun by Levisohn in "A Menu of Orientations to the Teaching of Rabbinic Literature" (volume 76, issue 1 of this Journal), and continued by a number of respondents (volume 76, issue 2). After discussing several insights offered by respondents, the article takes up the question of whether the menu is accurate.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Jews, Judaism, Religious Education
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2012
We are sometimes told that practitioners have a hard time with theory. But those who are committed to nurturing a certain kind of intellectual capacity among Jewish educational practitioners--the capacity to identify and critically engage with vision in Jewish education, a capacity that we can call a "philosophical disposition"--must accept the…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2009
This article builds on Greenstein's advocacy of a "pragmatic pedagogy of Bible" by pursuing four issues. First, do we select among methodological approaches to Bible according to our desired interpretive outcome but not according to any internal criteria? Is it merely a matter of "choice"? Second, in what sense are interpretive approaches usefully…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Teaching Methods, Religious Education, Instruction
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2008
Barry Holtz' (2003) presentation of a map of orientations for the teaching of Bible provides a certain kind of focus for research, enabling us to ask deeper and richer question about those orientations. This article investigates the teaching of one teacher, in two different settings--more specifically, how that teacher introduces Bible in those…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Teaching Methods, Comparative Analysis, Educational Research
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2008
The literature on curricular integration in Jewish education has tended to focus on two basic paradigms. In the first paradigm, the integration of Jewish and general studies curricula represents the aspiration that the graduates of the institution will likewise integrate Jewish and general studies (or "Americanism" or "modernity") in their lives.…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Elementary Education, Integrated Curriculum
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2005
This articles extends the conversation begun by Levisohn in volume 71:1 of this journal, and continued by a number of respondents in volume 71:2. These articles identify two notable themes among the responses: The first is the issue of pluralism, and the tension between vision and exclusion. Despite the best of intentions, it seems unavoidable…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Institutional Mission, Religious Education
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2004
In this article, the author focuses on these questions: why is American Jewish history worthy of being "taught"? And what purpose should such teaching serve? Philosophical questions such as these are important because topics of study are not self-justifying, and asking the questions--questions that must be pursued through conceptual inquiry,…
Descriptors: Jews, Educational Objectives, Historians, Patriotism
Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2004
This article examines the question of whether one ought to hold religious experience as a Jewish educational goal and, more fundamentally, to ask what this might mean. The objective is to begin to probe what an education toward (Jewish) religious experience would entail and what some of the theoretical, moral and practical obstacles might be. The…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Jews, Educational Objectives, Moral Values