A Bibliography of Jewish Education in the United States
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Entries from thousands of publications whether in English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and German on all aspects of Jewish education from pre-school through secondary education.
This book contains entries from thousands of publications whether in English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and German—books, research reports, educational and general periodicals, synagogue histories, conference proceedings, bibliographies, and encyclopedias—on all aspects of Jewish education from pre-school through secondary education
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A Bibliography of Jewish Education in the United States - Norman Drachler
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF
JEWISH EDUCATION
IN THE UNITED STATES
Compiled and Edited by NORMAN DRACHLER
WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS DETROIT
In Association with AMERICAN JEWISH ARCHIVES CINCINNATI
Copyright ©1996 by Wayne State University Press, Detroit, Michigan 48201.
All material in this work, except as identified below, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/.
All material not licensed under a Creative Commons license is all rights reserved. Permission must be obtained from the copyright owner to use this material.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Drachler, Norman.
A bibliography of Jewish education in the United States / compiled and edited by Norman Drachler.
p.cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-8143-4350-0 (alk. paper); 978-0-8143-4349-4 (ebook)
1. Jews—Education—United States—Bibliography. 2. Jewish religious education—United States—Bibliography. I. American Jewish Archives. II. Title.
Z5814.J4D721996
[LC741]
016.2966′8—dc2093-47221
DESIGNER | S. R. TENENBAUM
The publication of this volume in a freely accessible digital format has been made possible by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Mellon Foundation through their Humanities Open Book Program.
http://wsupress.wayne.edu/
This book is dedicated TO MY WIFE EVELYN
to the memory of my parents, ROSE AND ISRAEL DRACHLER
and to the memory of our daughter JUDITH DRACHLER HANDEL
1945–1983
Publication of this book was made possible by the generosity of the following foundations and funds:
THE BENARD L. MAAS FOUNDATION
THE ALAN AND SHARYL ACKERMAN FUND
THE SAMUEL AND JEAN FRANKEL FOUNDATION
THE MORRIS AND EMMA SCHAVER PUBLICATION FUND FOR JEWISH STUDIES
THE COHN FAMILY PHILANTHROPIC FUND
THE TAUBMAN FOUNDATION
CONTENTS
Foreword by Jacob R. Marcus and Abraham J. Peck
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction to Sources
Abbreviations
PART • I •
THE SCHOOLS
CHAPTER 1 Types of Jewish Schools
CHAPTER 2 Curriculum
CHAPTER 3 Pedagogy
CHAPTER 4 The Arts
CHAPTER 5 Bar/Bat Mitzvah
CHAPTER 6 The Bible
CHAPTER 7 Early Childhood Education
CHAPTER 8 Exceptional Children
CHAPTER 9 Guidance
CHAPTER 10 Hebrew
CHAPTER 11 History
CHAPTER 12 The Holocaust
CHAPTER 13 School Library
CHAPTER 14 Life Cycle of a Jew
CHAPTER 15 Literature
CHAPTER 16 Mitzvot/Values and Contemporary Issues
CHAPTER 17 Textbooks
CHAPTER 18 The High School
CHAPTER 19 American Jewry and the Land of Israel
CHAPTER 20 Day School
CHAPTER 21 Yiddish Secular Schools
CHAPTER 22 Higher Education
PART • II •
THE PROFESSION
CHAPTER 23 Administration
CHAPTER 24 The Teacher
CHAPTER 25 The Rabbi and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 26 Conferences in Jewish Education, 1890–1988
CHAPTER 27 Men and Women Who Influenced Jewish Education
PART • III •
COMMUNITY AND JEWISH EDUCATION
CHAPTER 28 Historical Background of Jewish Education
CHAPTER 29 History of Jewish Education in the United States
CHAPTER 30 The American Jewish Community
CHAPTER 31 The Home and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 32 Adult Education
CHAPTER 33 The Woman’s Role and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 34 Sephardim and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 35 Youth and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 36 Camp
CHAPTER 37 Local Sources for Jewish Education
PART • IV •
CRITERIA AND EVALUATION
CHAPTER 38 Theology and Education
CHAPTER 39 Religious Education
CHAPTER 40 Philosophy of Jewish Education
CHAPTER 41 Goals of Jewish Education
CHAPTER 42 Research in Jewish Education
CHAPTER 43 Change in Jewish Education
CHAPTER 44 The Social Sciences and Jewish Education
CHAPTER 45 Assessment
CHAPTER 46 The Future of Jewish Education
CHAPTER 47 Bibliographies of Jewish Education in Other Lands
CHAPTER 48 Bibliographies of Jewish Education and Related Fields in the United States
Supplement
Index
FOREWORD
Norman Drachler’s bibliography of Jewish education in America is a most important book. The American Jewish Archives is delighted to be a copublisher of the volume because its intent is very much our intent.
Let us be more specific. The American Jewish Archives was founded in 1947 at a critical time in the history of the American Jewish community. The Holocaust had just recently devastated the thousand-year history of European Jewish communal existence. The Archives was created as one of the means by which American Jews and their leadership could begin to understand the history and development of the Jewish experience in this nation and in the Western Hemisphere. It was our hope that such an understanding would help American Jewry, now the best-educated Jewish community in history, face the awesome responsibility of preserving the continuity of Jewish life and learning.
In much the same way, Norman Drachler’s book is being published at a time when American Jewry, indeed much of world Jewry, is faced with the realization that individual assimilation and a loss of Jewish identification (through intermarriage and a significant decrease in religious practice) have placed the Jewish people in a growing worldwide crisis of Jewish identity.
In such a crisis environment, many within the Jewish community have identified Jewish education, a major transmitter of Jewish identify, as potentially the single most effective antidote to this dilemma.
But in its present form Jewish education cannot serve this function. Certainly not where Jewish children view Jewish education until their thirteenth year (and hardly ever beyond) as something to endure and be liberated from with the celebration of one’s bar or bat mitzvah. Certainly not where Jewish education remains a step-child in the budgeting priorities of Jewish communal life.
On the other hand, there has never been a more advantageous period in the history of American Jewish life for the rejuvenation of Jewish education. Over three hundred different institutions of higher learning in the United States offer one or more undergraduate courses in Jewish studies. Of these, at least forty offer a Judaic studies major and nearly thirty sponsor graduate programs.
We alluded earlier to a similarity between the intent of this book and that of the American Jewish Archives. It has always been our purpose to provide the researcher of the American Jewish experience with the most comprehensive set of materials available for his or her research project. Whether it was primary documentation in the form of letters, newspaper clippings, microfilms, or printed ephemera, we have always sought to satisfy each and every research need.
In much the same way, Norman Drachler has sought to provide the reader of this book with an adundance of selected materials on almost every conceivable area of Jewish education in America. Think of it—his bibliography includes over six hundred doctoral dissertations and over four hundred master’s theses on Jewish education and related fields!
Beyond the simple abundance of listed items in this volume, there is also Drachler’s determined effort to bring together the literature of the various ideologies in Jewish education, whether it be the Orthodox Talmud Torah, the Conservative or Reform Sunday School, or the growing number of non-Orthodox day schools. And in this book one has sources in Hebrew and Yiddish, reflecting the smaller but nevertheless important streams in American Jewish educational history.
In compiling this massive bibliography on American Jewish education Drachler has really presented the reader with a history of American Jewish life and identity. The history of American Jewry and its development is integrally tied to education—whether that education meant advancement and achievement on an individual level or the belief in public education (and the strict separation of religious and secular schooling) on a communal basis.
But, most important, Jewish education has sought to be the foundation stone of Jewish identity in America—whether it meant merging an American and a Jewish identity into one or (more recently) stressing the Jewish aspect. Isaac Leeser, no doubt the most important religious leader of early American Jewry, understood this as early as 1840. In commenting upon the success of the first Jewish Sunday school in America, founded in 1838 in Philadelphia by Rebecca Gratz, Leeser wrote, it is the first duty of Israel to instill knowledge of divine things in the hearts of the young. . . . It is but seldom that so noble an aim has been sought after, begun solely for the glorification of our Maker and the well-being of his people.
This is still a noble aim a century and a half after it was first articulated. If the American Jewish Archives and this volume can advance that aim in some way, then our efforts will have borne fruit and satisfaction will be our greatest reward.
Jacob R. Marcus
Director, American Jewish Archives
Abraham J. Peck
Administrative Director, American Jewish Archives
PREFACE
During the early stages of Jewish settlement in America the synagogue generally assumed responsibility for the religious and educational needs of Jewish children. Up until about 1850 many, if not most, Jewish children received their Jewish and general education in a synagogue school or from a private tutor. As the Jewish population increased, particularly in the latter half of the nineteenth century, the majority of Jewish children entered the public schools. Synagogues continued their educational programs either on Sunday or after school hours, though some all-day schools continued offering both general and religious Jewish education.
In the first half of the twentieth century Jewish religious groups and some Jewish organizations adopted plans for Jewish education and established national commissions to foster and improve educational programs. Some cities introduced central agencies or bureaus in an effort to advance the quality of Jewish education at the local level. During this period national educational organizations were launched by lay leaders and educators concerned with setting higher standards for Jewish education. Teacher and principal organizations were founded on both the local and national level. Some professional organizations were based on ideological interests. These groups, in turn, published educational journals and textbooks, extending the scope of educational development.
Thus data about Jewish education in the United States is spread over a multitude of publications, education and general journals, synagogue histories, research reports, conference proceedings, bureau reports, and proceedings of various rabbinical conferences and national organizations. There are also Jewish yearbooks and psychological and sociological studies of Jewish life in America that include important articles and inquiries related to Jewish education. Because of this diffusion, there has long been a need for a comprehensive bibliography on Jewish education in the United States to acquaint the Jewish educator and the general reader with some of the primary sources and major works on Jewish education past and present.
There are, of course, many reasons to justify the publication of a bibliography on Jewish education. I wish to underscore two: the growth of the Jewish day school after World War II and the recent practice of many congregations to hire full-time educational directors. Both changes bring into Jewish education full-time professionals with the training and time to utilize Jewish sources for the improvement of the educational program. The growing involvement of thousands of university-educated lay volunteers on religious school boards and committees, as well as the expanded responsibilities of community Federations and national organizations in Jewish education offer additional incentives for the compilation of this bibliography. Lay leaders and educators need access to information that will assist them in decision making, research, and curriculum development.
A bibliography that brings together the literature of various ideologies in Jewish education would also be useful to university students working on dissertations in education. General history of education courses in most schools and colleges of education contain little information on Jewish education, and what little there is usually focuses on the ancient era. With the recent increase in Judaic departments in American colleges and universities, there will be a growing need for Jewish sources. This bibliography includes about six hundred doctoral dissertations and about four hundred master’s theses on Jewish education and related fields. There is also a growing interest in local Jewish history. Chapter 37, Local Sources for Jewish Education, lists materials on the Jewish community at the state and local level.
This bibliography will also be useful to those concerned about how to transmit their religious, historical, and cultural values to their children. Those who reside in communities with extensive Judaica collections too often forget that the majority of Jewish educators work in communities where information about Judaica and Jewish education is very limited. In some instances, educators are not aware of the materials that do exist.
In compiling this volume, efforts were made to include all aspects of Jewish education, from preschool through secondary education, in the various types of schools in the United States. Included were entries from educational and general periodicals, yearbooks, books, proceedings, bibliographies, and encyclopedias that provided sufficient data for the reader to locate the source of the reference. Information about publications of the various central agencies in cities are from periodicals, histories of Jews in American cities, or publications by Jewish historical societies. In some instances where articles about schools reflecting a particular educational ideology were not found, textbooks issued by the organization were included.
To illustrate the diffusion of Jewish educational information, let us take the day school as an example. This volume records about seven hundred items on the Jewish day school in the United States. These entries consist of thirty-seven doctoral dissertations, ten master’s theses, and fifty different periodicals. About four hundred items are from periodicals and the remaining entries are from books, proceedings, reports, and pamphlets. The vast majority were written in English, but there is also a rich literature in Hebrew, Yiddish, and Ladino on the day school.
As an educator I am grateful to the bibliographers of Jewish education whose publications are listed in this work. My classroom experience undoubtedly accounts for some of the categories included. I have followed the counsel of the late historian and rabbinic scholar Simha Assaf and included references related to Jewish education in the United States. The areas added, particularly the social sciences, are selective and I hope adequate to open related vistas for educators and community leaders concerned with Jewish education. Education is not a discipline that is isolated from the society in which it functions. As teacher, principal, or school board member, one needs awareness and understanding of the social forces that influence Jewish education in the United States.
In compiling this bibliography the prime focus was upon the anticipated audience of the volume, primarily teachers, principals, and educational lay leaders. Each part begins with a detailed table of contents, listing the subheadings under which materials are grouped in that part. Where the quantity of material warrants, topics are subdivided into materials prior to 1950 and materials after 1950. Most materials prior to 1900 are listed in chapter 29, History of Jewish Education in the United States.
Chapter 27, Men and Women Who Influenced Jewish Education, has been a particular concern. While I included what I found in the existing literature, I am aware that important educators have been omitted. Because it contributes to a better understanding of Jewish education, the material in this chapter, though incomplete, has been included nonetheless.
The section called Gleanings
that appears at the end of most chapters, though not common in general bibliographies, is intended to give the insider greater awareness of some of the issues and problems that confront teachers, administrators, and lay leaders. For those outside the field, these gleanings may shed some light on the state of Jewish education in America—its goals, achievements, and problems.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Compiling a bibliography is dependent upon the help and suggestions made by knowledgable individuals in the area of Jewish education. I was fortunate in finding many who were both supportive and helpful.
The publication of a bibliography on Jewish education in the United States by the American Jewish Archives and Wayne State University Press reflects the commitment of both institutions to the need for research in all aspects of America’s cultural and religious life. My thanks and appreciation to Dr. Jacob R. Marcus and Dr. Abraham J. Peck of the American Jewish Archives and to Arthur B. Evans, Alice Nigoghosian, and Leonard N. Simons, longtime friend and benefactor of the Wayne State University Press, for their counsel and assistance.
Sol Drachler, my brother, has read the original and subsequent copies of the entire manuscript. His comments and suggestions have improved both the content and the organization of the bibliography. I am also very appreciative of his efforts in obtaining support for the publication.
Dr. Abraham P. Gannes has read the entire manuscript and improved on the Hebrew translations. He has also provided a great deal of material that has enriched the total manuscript. I am very grateful for his advice and support of the total project. I am indebted to Joseph M. Papo for the section on Sephardim, particularly for his research on the educational items from the Ladino press in America.
I am thankful to Rabbi Alexander M. Schindler and Rabbi Daniel B. Syme of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations for finding time in their busy schedules to review the early manuscript and to involve others in the needs of a comprehensive bibliography on Jewish education in the United States.
I want to acknowledge the following, who provided encouragement and help: Rabbi Sidney Akselrad of Congregation Beth Am; Dr. Shimon Frost and Dr. George Pollak at the Jewish Education Service of North America; Micha Falk Oppenheim, senior cataloger of the Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary of America; Barbara Leff, librarian of the Stephen S. Wise Temple; Hava Ben-Zvi, librarian of the Bureau of Jewish Education of Los Angeles; Sara S. Lee, director, HUC-JIR, Rhea Hirsch School of Education; Rabbi Samuel Joseph, HUC-JIR, of Cincinnati; Dr. Eduardo Rauch, co-director of Melton Research Center; Rabbi Yaakov Fruchter, director of publications, Torah Umesorah; Rabbi Stuart Kelman, executive director of the Jewish Agency of the Greater East Bay Area (San Francisco area); Dr. Alvin I. Schiff, executive vice president of the Board of Jewish Education of Greater New York; and Dr. William B. Brickman, emeritus professor of education, University of Pennsylvania, of blessed memory.
Several libraries have been very helpful in locating materials. My special thanks to the library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, the Judaica section of the New York Public Library, the libraries of the HUC-JIR in Cincinnati and Los Angeles, and the Jewish Community Library of San Francisco.
My thanks and appreciation also to the following Institutions that have provided financial aid for travel and research: Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, Dr. Jerry Hochbaum, executive director; The Paul and Jean Hanna Archival Collection on The Role of Education, Hoover Institute, Stanford University, Gerald A. Dorfman, senior fellow and curator.
INTRODUCTION TO SOURCES
A number of sources exist listing works on various aspects of Jewish education and related topics, sources that have proved invaluable in the preparation of this volume.
Efforts to document literature on Jewish education are not confined to this century. In his Bibliography of Jewish Bibliographies (Jerusalem, 1969), Shlomo Shunami cites Baruch Strassburger’s History of Jewish Education and Instruction, published in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1885. Under various categories—pedagogy, the Bible, textbooks, Hebrew, prayer books for students, educational journals, textbooks, mathematics books in Hebrew, etc.—Strassburger lists items ranging from 1200 C.E. to 1885. The texts are generally listed in Hebrew with notes in German.
A major source for Jewish education in general and Jewish textbooks in particular is the four-volume study by Simha Assaf, Sources for the History of Jewish Education (H.) from the Middle Ages to 1840 (Jerusalem, 1942–45). Volume four lists 348 textbooks, including year, place of publication, and citations to his discussion of the texts.
The five-volume Educational Encyclopedia (H.) (Jerusalem, 1961–69), includes extensive bibliographies on Israel and other countries. The Institute of Contemporary Jewry of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem published in 1965 an annotated bibliography by Uriah Z. Engelman, Jewish Education in Europe 1914–1962. Another very important Israeli publication is Kirjat Sefer (H.), a bibliographical quarterly published since 1924. It includes a section on education in Israel and other countries. References from other countries are listed in the language of publication.
All educational journals published in the United States are, of course, important to the student of Jewish education. Two journals with the longest publication span and containing indexes are Sheviley Hahinuch (H.) and Jewish Education, both published by the Council for Jewish Education, formerly the National Council for Jewish Education. Back in 1928, Professor Samuel I. Feigin urged Jewish educators to provide supplementary bibliographies in their textbooks to broaden the teacher’s knowledge of the subjects taught (Sheviley Hahinuch 3:3 (Fall 1928), 219–23).
The Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Commission on Jewish Education (with CCAR and NATE) currently publishes Compass (formerly The Jewish Teacher, 1933–88). The United Synagogue of America, CJE, publishes Impact, formerly The Jewish School and Democracy and Synagogue School, 1943–1988). These have indexes in various issues. Torah Umesorah’s Jewish Parent (1948–77) is a journal on day school education.
The Jewish Education Service of North America, Inc., formerly American Association for Jewish Education, has published The Pedagogic Reporter since 1949 and has an index for its first thirty years. Alternative Magazine (Denver) has an index for the first eight years (1970–78). Studies in Bibliography and Booklore, published since 1953 by HUC-JIR, has several bibliographies on European Jewish education.
In 1964, the National Curriculum Research Institute of the AAJE and the University of Judaism, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, published Abstracts of Doctoral and Masters’ Dissertations on Jewish Education and Related Areas, compiled and edited by Frank Rosenthal with the assistance of Judah Pilch. In 1983, JESNA added Doctoral Dissertations in Jewish Education, 1975–1982, compiled by George Pollack. Between 1963 and 1975, Yivo—Institute for Jewish Research published eight monographs, American Doctoral Dissertations and Masters Theses on Jewish Subjects, edited by Phyllis Disenhouse and Witta Ravid. Yivo, both in Europe and the United States, has published in Yiddish several major bibliographical studies of Jewish education in Europe and North America.
A major bibliographic contribution to Jewish education by JESNA are several volumes of Materials Resource Guide for Jewish Education, developed by the Department of Pedagogic Services, Fradle Freidenreich, Director, and published by the Central Agency for Jewish Education, Miami. The bibliographies are annotated and contain data on numerous topics—social studies, literature, Jewish life, synagogue, prayer, liturgy, and so on—as well as an author index. The materials are organized along recommended age levels and contain a great deal of helpful information for teachers and administrators.
Eliezer R. Malachi and Ephim H. Jeshurin are two U.S. bibliographers who have devoted their energies to Jewish education. Their contributions appear frequently in various sections of this volume. In the Jubilee Book of the Hebrew Teachers’ Union of Greater New York (H.), edited by Zevi Scharfstein (New York, 1944), Malachi published a bibliography The Literature of Jewish Education in America.
Organized under various educational classifications, it totals 729 entries. The Hadoar (H.) and various other Hebrew and Yiddish journals contain bibliographic articles by Malachi on Hebrew literature and education.
Ephim H. Jeshurin has devoted his efforts to Yiddish education in America and to modern Yiddish literature. His volume One Hundred Years: Modern Yiddish Literature—Bibliography (Y.) was published by the Education Committee of the Workmen’s Circle in 1965. The bibliography consists of two major divisions: Yiddish Literature and Bibliography on the School Movement Educational Problems. Jeshurin’s education bibliography has more than four thousand entries and is organized into nine sections. It also lists some educational items in English. The large number of items from Yiddish newspapers and journals is particularly valuable, since many of these periodicals are no longer being published and can be found only in a limited number of libraries.
Bibliographic works exist on four distinguished American Jewish educators. Abraham P. Gannes has edited and compiled two studies, one on Leo L. Honor and another on Alexander M. Dushkin. Each includes an introductory essay by Gannes, selected writings, and a bibliography of the works of each. A bibliography on Zevi Scharfstein, Sefer Scharfstein: Jubilee Volume (H.), edited by Zvulun Ravid, was published in Tel Aviv in 1970. It includes a bibliography of Scharfstein’s writings compiled by Akivah Ben Ezra. The entries are listed chronologically under various categories. Emanuel Gamoran: His Life and His Work, edited by Samuel Grand and Mamie G. Gamoran, includes biographic materials, a selection of Gamoran’s writings, and a bibliography of his works.
There are also several bibliographic volumes which include educational sections: Bibliography of Jewish Social Studies by Salo W. Baron, An Index to Scientific Articles on American Jewish History by Jacob R. Marcus, and The Jewish Community in America by William W. Brickman. The state of California has enhanced the study of American Jewish History with three bibliographic volumes. California Jewish History, selected and annotated by Norton B. Stern (1967) is a descriptive bibliography from the Gold Rush to post-World War I. Sara G. Cogan’s The Jews of San Francisco and The Greater Bay Area, 1849–1919 (1973) and The Jews of Los Angeles, 1849–1945 (1980), both annotated bibliographies, were published by the Western Jewish History Center, Judah L. Magnes Museum.
Children’s literature has not received in the past the attention it merits. In the last fifty years teachers, parents, and children have benefited from articles in The Jewish Book Annual and various journals on books for children. Enid Davis’s A Comprehensive Guide to Children’s Literature with a Jewish Theme, published in 1981, is an important contribution to this field.
The following indexes and bibliographies were most helpful: An Index to Jewish Periodicals, edited by Miriam Leikind; American Jewish History, with its annual sections Judaica Americana,
compiled and annotated by Nathan M. Kaganoff, and American Jewish Studies,
compiled and annotated by Marc Lee Raphael; The Jewish Book Annual, which compiles annually new fiction and nonfiction books published in English, Hebrew, and Yiddish. The bibliographic works by Micha Falk Oppenheim were also of great help. To all the above, I am very grateful
It is encouraging to note the growing literature on the history of local communities, many studies sponsored by local Jewish Federations, and the rise of local historical societies. It is hoped these developments and the increasing numbers of Jewish studies programs in U.S. colleges and universities will provide increased opportunities for scholars to enhance our cultural needs, including Jewish education.
ABBREVIATIONS
PART • I •
THE SCHOOLS
PART I | THE SCHOOLS
CONTENTS
1|TYPES OF JEWISH SCHOOLS
Schools
Gleanings
2|CURRICULUM
Development and Assessment prior to 1950
Curricula prior to 1950
Development and Assessment since 1950
Curricula since 1950
Gleanings
3|PEDAGOGY
Projects, Methods, and Concerns
Judaic Sources—Teaching the Texts (Selected)
Clubs and Extracurricular Artivities (Selected)
Games, Role-playing, and Learning (Selected)
Sex Education and the School (Selected)
Computers in the School
Education for New Immigrants
Cults, Drinking, Suicide, and Youth
Marriage, Divorce, and Intermarriage (Selected)
Bereavement in the Classroom
Gleanings
4|THE ARTS
General (Selected)
Art in the Jewish School
Audio-Visual Aids
The Dance (Selected)
Drama—General (Selected)
Drama in the School
The School Assembly
Music—General (Selected)
Music in the School
Gleanings
5|BAR/BAT MITVAH
Prior to 1950
Since 1950
Gleanings
6|THE BIBLE
General (Selected)
Teaching the Bible prior to 1950
Teaching the Bible since 1950
Textbooks and Guides for Teachers prior to 1950
Textbooks, Workbooks, and Guides since 1950
Gleanings
7|EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
Prior to 1950
Articles, Manuals, and Books since 1950
Literature for the Very Young (Selected)
Guides, Curricula, and Manuals prior to 1950
Guides, Curricula, and Manuals since 1950
Gleanings
8|EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN
Special Education
Gleanings
9|GUIDANCE
In the School
Gleanings
10|HEBREW
Hebrew in Jewish Life (Selected)
Methodology and Teaching Aids prior to 1950
Methodology and Teaching Aids since 1950
Basic Vocabulary Lists prior to 1950
Basic Vocabulary lists since 1950
Reading
Pronunciation
Assessment prior to 1950
Assessment since 1950
Testing and Evaluation
Hebrew in Public High Schools
Hebrew Textbooks prior to 1950 (Selected)
Hebrew Textbooks since 1950
Gleanings
11|HISTORY
General History (Selected)
Prior to 1950
Since 1950
Social Studies
Texts, Readers, and Resources prior to 1950 (Selected)
Texts, Readers, and Resources since 1950 (Selected)
Gleanings
12|THE HOLOCAUST
Background Materials (Selected)
Teaching and Commemoration
Texts and Literature for Students (Selected)
Gleanings
13|SCHOOL LIBRARY
The Library
Gleanings
14|LIFE CYCLE OF A JEW
Synagogue and Prayer—General (Selected)
Synagogue and Prayer in the Classroom
The Junior Congregation
Prayer Books, Guides, and Textbooks for Synagogue and Prayer
Holidays, Ceremonies, and Customs
Texts, Guides, and Books for Holidays, Ceremonies, and Customs
Gleanings
15|LITERATURE
Juvenile Literature prior to 1950
Juvenile Literature since 1950
Periodicals for Children and Youth
Gleanings
16|MITZVOT/VALUES AND CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Prior to 1950 (Selected)
Since 1950 (Selected)
Transmitting Values in the Classroom prior to 1950
Transmitting Values in the Classroom since 1950
Keren Ami in the Classroom
Textbooks and Teacher Guides
Gleanings
17|TEXTBOOKS
1900 to 1950
Since 1950
Gleanings
18|THE HIGH SCHOOL
Prior to 1950
Since 1950
Curriculum and Pedagogy
Confirmation in the High School
Adolescence and Its Implications
Evaluation
Books, Mini Courses, and Texts (Selected)
Gleanings
19|AMERICAN JEWRY AND THE LAND OF ISRAEL
Prior to 1948 (Selected)
Since 1948 (Selected)
Zion in the Classroom before 1948
Israel in the Classroom since 1948
Texts and Fiction prior to 1948 (Selected)
Elementary Textbooks and Workbooks since 1948 (Selected)
Secondary Textbooks, Guides, and Workbooks
Curricula, Units, Mini Courses, and Materials for Students and Teachers
Gleanings
20|DAY SCHOOL
History
Types
Goals
The Debate
Growth and Development
Curriculum and Pedagogy
Programs for Exceptional Children
Integration of Curriculum
Organization and Administration
Professional Organizations
Parents and the Jewish Day School
Assessment
Values and Identity
Financial Support
Periodicals for Children and Youth
Texts and Guides
Gleanings
21|YIDDISH SECULAR SCHOOLS
Background Materials (Selected)
History of Yiddish Secular Schools
Rationale
Curriculum—General
Language
Literature
Bible
Hebrew
History
Pedagogy and Related Programs
The Day School
Secondary Education
Tradition
Change
Textbooks
The Teacher
Higher Education and Teacher Training
Home and Education
On Consolidating Yiddish Schools
Camps
Assessment prior to 1950
Assessment since 1950
Organizations Sponsoring Yiddish Education
Books for Children and Youth (Selected)
Periodicals for Youth (Selected)
Periodicals for Educators and Parents (Selected)
Textbooks, Readers, Workbooks, and Teacher Guides (Selected)
Gleanings
22|HIGHER EDUCATION
Teacher Training prior to 1925
Teacher Training 1925–1950
Teacher Training since 1950
Jewish Institutions of Higher Learning prior to 1950 (Including Judaic Studies in General Colleges and Universities)
Jewish Institutions of Higher Learning since 1950
Gleanings
1
TYPES OF JEWISH SCHOOLS
See also chapters 20 and 21
SCHOOLS
American Council for Judaism. Working Curriculum and Statement of Objectives, School for Judaism. 1956–57.
Barkan, Irving. The Congregational Schools in American Jewish Education.
Jew Ed 24 (Spring 1953): 19–22.
Benathan, Morris. The Role of the Talmud Torah in Jewish Education in America. The Jewish Library Series, no. 5. N.Y.: Herald Square Press, 1946.
Benson, Paulette. Jewish Educational Movements: The Goals and the Differences. A comparison of the stated educational goals of the four major North American Jewish movements. Master’s project, HUC–JIR, 1978.
Chipkin, Israel S., ed. Jewish Schools in America: A Description of Types of Jewish Schools in Jewish Communities in the United States and Canada. N.Y.: AAJE, 1947.
1. The Afternoon School
Greenberg, Simon. The Congregational School
(Three days a week), pp. 13–19.
Mark, Yudel. The Yiddish Schools
(Five and three days a week), pp. 20–27.
Whiteman, Kalman. The Talmud Torah School
(Five days a week), pp. 7–12.
2. The All-Day School
Azrieli, Shlomoh. The Foundation School,
pp. 36–43.
Lookstein, Joseph H. The Jewish Day School,
pp. 28–35.
3. Gamoran, Emanuel. The Jewish Sunday School,
pp. 44–49.
* Diskind, Zalman. The Orthodox Congregational Hebrew School in the United States: A Study of its Background, Administration, Methods, and Outlook. Dropsie U., 1974.
Gelbart, Gershon G. Types of Jewish Schooling.
Reg (1959): 1–4.
Greenstone, Julius H. The Talmud Torah in America.
Jewish Teacher 1 (Jan. 1916): 28–34.
Jewish Education 21 (Spring 1950)
Bass, Hyman. The Yiddish Schools,
pp. 56–57.
Gamoran, Emanuel. The Union of American Hebrew Congregations,
pp. 59–60.
Kaminetsky, Joseph. Torah Umesorah,
pp. 58–59.
Margolis, Isidor. Mizrachi,
pp. 54–55.
Millgram, Abraham E. The United Synagogue of America,
pp. 57–58.
Kaminetsky, Joseph. The Jewish Day Schools.
Phi Delta Kappa (Dec. 1963): 141–44.
Nardi, Noah. "בתי הת׳ת באמריקה„ (Talmud Torahs in America). Sh Hah (H.) 6 (Mar. 1946): 110–27. Also in JSS 8 (Apr. 1946): 51–74.
* Natelson, Herman. The Talmud Torahs: A Study of the School, the Pupil, and the Home. Fordham U., 1937. 214 pp.
Penn, Ascher. "אמעריקען קאונסיל פאר דזשודאאיזם גרינדעט אייגענע שולן„ (The American Council for Judaism Establishes Its Own Schools). Penn, 401–12.
Schiff, Alvin I. Types of Schools.
In The Jewish Day School in America, 87–91. N.Y.: JEC Press, 1966.
Siegel, Morton, ed. In Our School System.
(USCJE) Ped Rep 21 (Dec. 1969): 1–5.
Union of American Hebrew Congregations, CJE. In Our School System.
Ped Rep 19 (Dec. 1967): 11–13.
GLEANINGS
Leeser, Isaac
Memorial On Sunday Schools, 1840
As may easily be imagined, some prejudice was at first manifested by various persons, who fancied that they discovered an objectionable imitation of gentile practices in this undertaking, forgetting that it is the first duty of Israel to instil knowledge of divine things in the hearts of the young, and this institution was eminently calculated to bestow this necessary blessing alike upon rich and poor without fee or price. It is but seldom that so noble an aim has been sought after, begun solely for the glorification of our Maker and the well-being of his people; it is therefore gratifying to record, that this unfounded prejudice has nearly died away, and one cannot give a better evidence of the fact, that now fully one hundred children are enrolled.
JDH, 448.
The American Hebrew, May 14, 1880,
We may distinctly state that the Sunday School movement among American Jews which commenced by Rebecca Gratz less than a half century ago, is but the legitimate expression of a deep instinct of the Jewish mind. Real nurseries of Judaism, the institution deserves earnest support of the community.
Quoted by Moshe Davis in The Emergence of Conservative Judaism (1963), 434.
Brickner, Barnett R.,
If you go over the Conference yearbooks, you find a steady and continuous reference to the fact that this Conference urges upon its members and upon the Sunday schools of the country a more intensified form of Jewish education in the form of more time assigned to the work of Jewish education. What we should like to know is how are we to get more time for education for our schools? I do not think there is a rabbi in this Conference who is satisfied with the Sunday school, who is not willing to subscribe his name to the fact that the Sunday school has been, as far as the purposes of Reform Judaism are concerned, a failure. Why is it that we have not been able in our schools, with the conviction that we have on education, to put a week-day religious school in place of the Sunday school?
CCAR 33 (1923), 340.
The Commission on Jewish Education—UAHC,
Resolved: That this Commission in planning a detailed curriculum for the Jewish religious school of comprehensive scope, is unanimous in the conviction that a week-day session will have to be added to the present Sunday session in building up a system of religious education that shall be adequate to our needs. And this Commission urge upon the rabbinate and the congregations of this country that such an arrangement for additional instruction be adopted in our religious schools.
Quoted by Jacob B. Pollak in The Union of American Hebrew Congregations and the Problem of Jewish Education,
Proceedings, NCJSS (1926), 289.
Mark, Yudel,
The Yiddish school was not built on tradition. It did not have any ready made examples. From the very beginning it was seeking its way. It was free from the burden of superfluous but it also did not have the benefit of established forms. It was, therefore, natural that in the course of the thirty-six years of its existence in America it should have passed through a number of transmigrations.
Jew Ed 19 (Fall 1947), 31.
Honor, Leo L.,
With the emergence of non-sectarian public schools, and with the change of attitude towards the Hebrew Language under the influence of Reform ideas, it was considered adequate to limit lessons in religious education to Saturday and Sunday mornings, or even to Sunday mornings only; consequently the all-day schools were given up.
The Jewish People, Past and Present (1948), 2:154.
Yefroikin, Zalman
"One of the newer manifestations in the sphere of Jewish education was the Yiddish secular school which made its appearance shortly before World War I, and which owed its inception principally to the Jewish socialist movement and the Jewish labor organizations. . . . By 1918 three distinct and recognizable tendencies had crystallized in the Yiddish school movement: the schools of the Jewish National Workers’ Alliance, which changed its name from ‘National—Radical’ to ‘Jewish Folk Schools’; the Sholem Aleichem Schools and the Workmen’s Circle Schools. . . .
An additional change has manifested itself within the Yiddish secular school movement during recent years. The view that a Jewish national life could be possible without observance of a Jewish pattern . . . has been found erroneous; it has come to be recognized that to be a Jew it is necessary to live a Jewish life."
The Jewish People, Past and Present (1948), 2:144–48.
Axelrod, Herman C.,
While the creation of a religious community outside the school is our ultimate objective, our immediate objective should be the formation of a religious community within the Yeshiva proper. Modern education speaks of the school as a miniature society. The Yeshiva, by its very nature, must become a miniature Torah-society in the full sense of the word. This means that it must concern itself with every aspect of child development both within and without the classroom. It means that we must plan a program of co-curricular or extra-curricular activities that will meet the needs and interests of our children and provide them with the opportunity for creative expression, social contact and religious inspiration.
HDS, p. 184.
Ackerman, Walter I.,
When judged by even the least demanding standard of what it means to be an educated Jew, it is hard to avoid the feeling that the academic aspirations of the one-day-a-week school are either a colossal joke or an act of cynical pretentiousness.
Quoted in The Second Jewish Catalog (1976), 209.
2
CURRICULUM
For earlier period see chapter 29
Bugatch, Simon, William Chomsky, and Ben M. Edidin. New Developments in the Jewish Curriculum.
Jew Ed 17 (Nov. 1945): 13–21.
Chomsky, William. The Curriculum for the New Jewish Weekday School.
Jew Ed 5 (Jan.–Mar. 1933): 22–31.
Comins, Harry L. An Experiment with an Activity Curriculum.
Jew Ed 3 (Jan./Mar. 1931): 39–49.
———. An Integrated Curriculum for the Jewish School.
Jew Ed 4 (Apr./June 1932): 93–110.
Dushkin, Alexander M. Content of the Curriculum of the Jewish School.
Jew Teach 5 (Aug. 1923): 2–3.
Edelstein, Menachem M. "תכנית הלמודים והחמר מטעם ועד התכנית של אגודת המנהלים„ (The Curriculum and Materials Prepared by the Principals Association’s Curriculum Committee). Sh Hah (H.) 4 (Mar. 1944): 134–41.
———. "קביעת תכנית למודים בבית הספר העברי„ (Determining a Curriculum in the Jewish School). Sh Hah (H.) 9 (Aug. 1949): 123–29.
Edidin, Ben M., Jacob S. Golub, and Samuel Dinin. Re-evaluating Jewish School Curriculum.
Jew Ed 11 (Jan. 1940): 200–212.
Eisenberg, I. L. (Azriel). How To Write a Curriculum for a Jewish School.
Jew Ed, 2 (June 1930): 90–95.
Emil, Charles. A Problem Course in World Jewry.
Jew Teach 13 (Nov. 1944): 1–7.
Epstein, A. "על החבור„ (On Composition). Sh Hah (H.) (May–June 1939): 49–64.
Gamoran, Emanuel. What Shall Our Curriculum Be?
Jew Teach 1 (June 1933): 1–9.
DEVELOPMENT AND ASSESSMENT PRIOR TO 1950
Gamoran, Emanuel. Weekday Jewish Instruction. Cincinnati: DSSE, 1928. 9 pp.
Glasner, Samuel. Analysis of References to Jewish History, Religion, Ceremonies, and other Subjects of Jewish Religious School Instruction in Current Jewish Periodical Literature, as an Aid to Curriculum Construction.
Master’s thesis, HUC–JIR, 1936.
———. A Study in the Curriculum of the Jewish School.
Jew Ed 9 (Oct.–Dec. 1937): 153–62.
Glatstein, Harry N. Historical Survey of the Curriculum of the Jewish School.
Master’s thesis, Temple U., 1932.
Goldman, I. M. Let Us Search Our Ways.
Con Jud 3 (Feb. 1947): 1–5.
Goldman, Lucille W. Teaching Our Third Grade.
Jew Teach 5 (Nov. 1936): 7–11.
Goldman, Yehuda. "פעולות כלליות של המחלקה„ (General Classroom Activities). Sh Hah (H.) 4 (Dec. 1943): 39–42.
Golub, Jacob S. Activity Curriculum for Sunday Schools.
Jew Ed 14 (Jan./Mar. 1943): 146–50.
———. A Curriculum for the Primary Grades.
Jew Ed 3 (Jan./Mar. 1931): 49–55.
———. Re-Evaluating Jewish School Curricula.
Jew Ed (Jan. 1940): 200–212.
Golub, Jacob S., and Leo L. Honor. Some Guiding Principles for the Jewish School of Tomorrow.
Jew Ed 4 (Oct.–Dec. 1932): 150–62.
Goodman, Abram V., and Mrs. Abram V. Goodman. Folklore in the Religious School.
Jew Teach 4 (Nov. 1935), 8–14; 5 (Jan. 1936), 24–32.
Greenberg, Simon. Educational Content in Terms of Contemporary Needs.
RA (1941–44): 182–90. Also Jew Ed 15 (Jan. 1944): 70–74.
Kurzband, Toby K. Enriching Our Curriculum with Science.
Jew Teach 17: 3 (1949).
———. Notes on a Life-Activity Curriculum.
Jew Ed 3 (Oct.–Dec. 1931): 172–76.
Leibman, Moshe. Jewish Values as a Basis for Curriculum Organization.
Jew Ed 9 (Oct./Dec. 1937): 163–68.
———. New Trends in Methodology in America and in Our Jewish Schools.
Sh Hah (H.) 1 (1941): 15–29.
Levin, Mildred. Jewish Children Write.
Jew Teach 2 (June 1934): 15–17.
* Markowitz, Samuel H. An Approach to a Curriculum of Religious Education for a Reform Jewish Community in the Middle West. U. of Chicago, 1932. 194 pp. See CCAR 43 (1933): pp. 169–203.
Michlin, Michael. "שיעורים לדוגמא„ (Model Lessons) On the teaching of calligraphy. Sh Hah (H.) 2 (1926): 49–53.
Mittleman, Jacob. Pupil Activities
(Talmud Torah). Jew Ed 18 (Summer 1947): 31–37.
Nardi, Noah. "צורה ותכן בחנוך העברי„ (Form and Substance in Hebrew Education). Sh Hah (H.) 2 (Oct. 1942): 247–53.
Pearlman, David W. The Curriculum of a Congregational Hebrew School.
Jew Ed 3 (Apr.–June 1931): 98–100.
Pollak, I. Sh. "אין שיעור בלי טעמא„ (There is No Lesson Without ‘Motivation’). Sh Hah (H.) 7 (1926): 39–45.
Ranson, Marius. A Completely Departmentalized Religious School.
CCAR 45 (1935): 432–57.
Rappaport, Israel B. Some Essentials in the Reconstruction of the Jewish School Curriculum.
Jew Ed 8 (Oct.–Dec. 1936): 141–46.
* Schwartz, Lawrence W., Curriculum Development in a Reform Jewish School. Columbia Un., 1942, 174pp.
Slominsky, J. D. We Are Thankful.
Jew Teach 10 (Nov. 1941): 14–19.
Stone, Anne. Creative Self-Expression in the Religious School.
Jew Teach 1 (1933): 11–15.
Strouse, Edith M. Notes on a Reform Religious School
Jew Ed 6 (Apr./June 1934): 82–86.
Touroff, Nissan. "יםודות לתכנית-למודים בבית םפר עברי„ (Principles for a Curriculum in the Hebrew School) Sh Hah (H.) 2 (1927): 1–9, 1–7.
Wolf, Ernest M. Curriculum Trends in the Jewish Sunday School.
Recon (June 28, 1946): 17–23.
Zlowe, Pauline. In the Intermediate Grades.
Jew Teach 6 (Nov. 1937): 15–17.
CURRICULA PRIOR TO 1950
Cohen, Samuel. The Progressive Jewish School: An Integrated Activity Curriculum. N.Y.: USA, 1932. 171 pp.
Commission on Jewish Education, UAHC. The Curriculum of the Jewish Religious School
(Elementary and High School Departments) (2 sessions weekly). CCAR 33 (1923): 328–43.
Franzblau, Abraham. Curriculum of the Jewish Religious School: Syllabus for Education. Cincinnati: CJE of UAHC, 1935. 56 pp.
Frishberg, I. Z. Curriculum for Talmud Torah. Council of Orthodox Jewish Schools, 1943. 73pp.
———. תכנית למודים כללית„ (Tokhnit Limudim Kellalit) (H.). A general curriculum for the Hebrew school with a special section,
Zionism in the Past and Present." N.Y.: Mizrachi National Education Committee,