Tuesday, August 25, 2009

New Class for Women

Beginning this Thursday at 11am in the Lower School Library, I will be giving a weekly parsha class for women focusing on the Torah commentary of Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin. As some of you probably know, Rabbi Berlin, known as the Netziv, was the subject of my doctoral dissertation and has occupied a special place in my intellecual and religious world ever since. My goal in this class is to bring you into his world, to understand the Torah text as he understood it, and to appreciate the creative, penetrating, and insightful mind of one the 19th century's most storied Torah personalities.

For those who can't make it, I will try to record each class and post the recording on the web for all to access. More details on that will follow shortly.

For those who intend to come, please be sure to enter via the school's front entrance and to get a visitor's pass from Aviva at the front desk before heading down to the library.

Hope to see everyone there!

Thursday, August 20, 2009

We're Off!

With the opening of our high schools this morning our academic year is now in full swing. And what a start it's been! Time and again from every corner of the school I hear people saying that "last year was good, but there's even better in the air this year." From preschool to high school, ABCs to APs, Ariyot to Bava Kama, our incredible faculty has hit the ground running. Here's a brief glimpse at the magic which has brought our old building roaring back to life once again:

From Movies

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Faculty Growth

As the continuous growth and development of our faculty has been, and continues to be, one of our top priorities here at the Academy, I wanted to make mention of those faculty members who took of their precious summer vacation to pursue professional development opportunities and further the process of making themselves better teachers and our school a better school.

Back in July, Mrs. Gersten and Mrs. Perl went with Mrs. Tsuna and Mrs. Walker to a three day SDE conference in Chicago on Differentiated Instruction. Mrs. Tsuna led our Middle and High
School faculty in a session during In-Service in which she shared
some of the valuable tips and techniques she learned at the conference. At our wrap-up session at the close of In-Service, Mrs. Tsuna's presentation received high praise from all who attended.

Our two new Upper School Judaic Studies faculty recently completed rigorous programs in continuing education. Rabbi Kugielsky spent his second summer at the Jewish Education Leadership Institute Program at Loyola University, from which he will be receiving his Masters Degree in Education. Rabbi Stein completed the Educational Leadership Advancement Initiative through the Lookstein Center for Jewish Education at Bar Ilan University.

Speaking of Rabbi Stein, he and Mrs. Perl are currently in New York participating in the first "Academy" of this year's Jewish New Teacher Project. JNTP is a subsidiary of the New Teacher Center in
Santa Cruz, CA. Their mission is to train veteran teachers to become effective mentors for new teachers, thereby preventing "new teacher burnout" and improving student performance. Both Rabbi Stein and Mrs. Perl have been paired with Academy teachers who are still in the beginnings of their teaching career and will be working with them throughout the year, with the guidance of the Jewish New Teacher Project, to help them reflect on their strengths and weaknesses and grow in their effectiveness in the classroom.

Mrs. Kugielsky, our new 4th grade Judaic Studies teacher, attended a three-day workshop on using the Tal Am curriculum, while Morah Yehudit was in Israel teaching similar sessions for Judaic Studies teachers from across the globe.

I had the privilege of attending Yeshiva University's National Leadership Conference in Orlando together with several of our community's lay leaders. It was both thought-provoking and inspiring as it brought together lay and professional leaders of Orthodox communities from across the country to discuss the most significant challenges and the greatest opportunities that lie before us in the months and years ahead.

At the event Josh Kahane, incoming first Vice President of our Board of Trustees, received an award from Yeshiva University President Richard Joel for his work as part of a task force that is looking at ways to grow small and mid-size Jewish communities across the country.

I'd be remiss if I didn't also mention that ALL of our faculty read pertinent educational literature over the summer which they shared with their colleagues at In-Service. After all, every teacher at the Academy understands and appreciates that the more we grow, the more our students will grow. The more we learn, the more our students will learn. We're all, therefore, hard at work doing our own learning and growing so as to see even more of the same from every Academy student.




Monday, August 10, 2009

Rabbi Stein Joins the High Schools

Our High School students are in for a treat with the addition of Rabbi Noam Stein to our faculty for this year. Rabbi Stein comes to us after having served as a limude kodesh teacher, the school's Community Service Director, the Director of the Advisory Program and the 10th Grade Coordinator at SAR High School in Riverdale, NY. Prior to SAR, Rabbi Stein served as a teacher and as the Dean of Student Life at the Ma'ayanot High School for Girls in Teaneck, NJ. Rabbi Stein, who will be teaching Talmud in our Boys High School as well as Halachah and Jewish Philosophy, earned his BA in English Literature from Yeshiva University after spending two years learning in Kerem B'Yavneh in Israel. He then went on to receive his semicha from YU and, most recently, he completed the Educational Leadership Program through the Lookstein Center in Bar Ilan University.

In addition to his teaching, Rabbi Stein will continue his passion for cultivating student leadership and enabling meaningful student service opportunities in our high schools. Amongst many other responsibilities he will be creating a Community Service Program in our Boys High School, coordinating and enhancing the Community Service Program in our Girls High School, working together with Rabbi Gersten to create new student programs and leadership opportunities, and working to enhance the extra-curricular learning opportunities for our high schools.

Rabbi Stein's reputation as an accomplished talmid chacham, a progressive pedagogue, and teacher beloved by his students, should help our high schools reach even greater heights this coming year.

New Science Teachers

We are so excited to welcome two new faculty members to our Science department for this year.

Taking over our Elementary School Science program is Mrs. Shelli Henry. Mrs. Henry, a Memphis native, is a warm, creative, and enthusiastic teacher who comes to us having graduated Summa Cum Laude with a BS in Elementary School Science and having taught for several years both in St. Benedict at Auburndale School as well as in Shadowlawn Middle School. Her excitement for teaching and for science in particular will undoubtedly spill over to all of our lucky 1st through 6th graders who will have her this year.

Our Middle and High Schools are also receiving a boost to their science department with the addition of Dr. Melissa Matlock, whose impressive resume includes seven years as a Science Instructor at Hutchinson School for Girls, two years as a Science Instructor in Covington High School followed by five years as their Assistant Principal, and, most recently, five years teaching Chemistry and Biology and Germantown High School. Dr. Matlock's dry wit, commitment to her students, and high standards should greatly enrich our academic program.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Airliner Initiative

Please watch this video and send the link to anyone you think might be interested in participating. The more people we invite to take part, the better our chances of ensuring that the classrooms that our children enter in August will be dramatically different than those they left in June.

I'm happy to follow up in person with anyone who wants to know more. Just let me know who and how best to contact them. Thanks for your help!


Graduation 2009

Though a bit delayed, it's never too late to look at pictures of our students in their shining moments. This year's graduations - from Kindergarten to 8th grade to 12th grade - were certainly amongst them. Our students' accomplishments as well as the incredibly unique bond between student, faculty, and administration which pervades every class and every division were on display for all to admire. Enjoy!



To view and download the individual pictures seen in the slideshow click here.

Monday, June 1, 2009

CYHSB Play



Congratulations to our Boys High School and Dr. Jerry Kutliroff on yet another masterful dramatic performance. Last week's rendition of Ibsen's An Enemy of the People was the culmination of weeks of hard work by the actors, set designers, lighting and sound specialists, Director and Assistant Directors. The quality of our theater program under Dr. Kutliroff's direction, continues to exceed all expectations of a school our size and continues to be a source of pride to the school and the community.

Mini-Macs Come up Big

There's been a lot of talk this year about the success of our various basketball programs. Our Jr. High boys won the City Parks Championship, our JV Boys won several buzzer beaters and then pulled off an unlikely upset in the BBYO league, our Varsity Girls won the JCC championship, and our Varsity Boys had a dream season, winning three different championships and making it to the Tier Two finals in the Saracheck Invitational Tournament.

Yet, despite all of the truly remarkable success our basketball teams have had this year, I dare say it is our Mini-Macs Baseball team, comprised of students in 1st through 3rd grades, that might rank as our best sports story of the year. When Coach Carr, Coach Roper, and their dedicated assistants started with this group, they looked much like the Bad News Bears. Yet, over the course of just one season they went from struggling to get out of an inning without having the 6 run mercy-rule invoked, to outscoring their opponents 39-1 over their last three games. Their coaches taught them to field and to hit, where to be, where to go, and how to play together as a team. They taught them not to give up and not to get discouraged. They showed them that with hard work, commitment, and a willingness to learn, no challenge is too great and no hurdle is too high to overcome.

Though there are still a few games left to the season, what these boys have accomplished already should make us all quite proud.

For more pictures of the boys in action click here:
Mini Macs Baseball

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Sports Bash

Over the past year, our school's Athletic program has grown by leaps and bounds, both in terms of its offerings and in terms of its educational impact. While this week's Sports Bash was created by Coach Carr as a tribute to all of our student athletes and their dedicated coaches, it also served as a shining example of the initiative, enthusiasm, and dedication which Coach Carr brings each and every day to our students and our school.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Wheelchair Basketball

Yesterday many of our students had the opportunity to witness what has become an ongoing lesson in experiential learning and sensitivity training by our Junior High, thanks in large part to Mrs. Teri Graber. After having visited their school several months ago, high school students from the Shrine School, a Memphis city public school serving developmentally and physically handicapped kids, visited us yesterday for another inspiring, eye-opening, and most enjoyable game of basketball. As they did last time, when the wheelchair-bound members of their team were in the game, our students also sat in wheelchairs so as to level the playing field. And, as they did last time, our students understood that this game was not about winning and not even about making challenged kids feel good. It was about respecting who they are, getting a glimpse at what they go through, and appreciating that despite the differences between us and them, there is much that we all share.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Early Childhood Education Revisited

This week's Message from the Dean in our weekly school newsletter refers to two recently published articles which burst commonly held perceptions and argue for the reversal of recent trends in Early Childhood education. The first is an article by Peggy Orenstein entitled "Kindergarten Cram" which appeared in New York Times Magazine at the end of April. The second, by David McKay Wilson, appeared in the May / June edition of the Harvard Education Letter and is entitled "Developmentally Appropriate Practice in the Age of Testing."

If you have a child in Pre-K or Kindergarten, or will have one there soon, both articles are very much worth a read.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Lag Ba-Omer Softball

4 teams... 34 boys... 3 inning single elimination tournament on our rain soaked muddy field...Rabbi Gersten with his tie, Rabbi Spodek with his batting glove, and Rabbi Feigenbaum doing his best Keith Hernandez impression... a fun time was had by all...

Monday, May 11, 2009

Graduation Honors




It is my pleasure to announce that two most deserving young women from the Goldie Margolin School for Girls have been selected as Valedictorian and Salutatorian of this year's graduating class. Following in the school's tradition, the honors are given to the two students from either of our two high schools with the highest cumulative grade point average. This year those distinctions go to Raquel Kampf, who was named Valedictorian, and Eliana Graber, who was named Salutatorian. Both Raquel and Eliana will spend next year studying in Israel at Sha'alvim for Women, after which Raquel will go on to Stern College for Women and Eliana will attend Barnard College.

Also receiving special recognition at graduation will be Andrew Tavin, who will be presented with his National Merit Scholarship Award. Andrew, who will be attending NYU as a Presidential Honors Scholar, is one of only 8200 students - out of 1.5 million entrants from across the country - to win the prestigious National Merit award.



Congratulations to them all!

Monday, May 4, 2009

Yom Ha-Atzma'ut

From the solemn ceremonies and thought provoking programs of Yom Ha-Zikaron to the Early Childhood airplane rides and school-wide celebratory march of Yom Ha-Atzma'ut, these two action packed days serve as powerful reminders to our students of the place which the State of Israel has - and must always have - in our hearts and minds.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Last week's Girls High School Dinner was a wonderful tribute to two special teachers - Mrs. Bluma Zuckerbrodt-Finkelstein (Zionism) and Mrs. Barbara Manserberg (Spanish) - and to twenty-eight special girls whose hard work, dedication, and boundless school spirit made the night a phenomenal success.

Yasher kochachen!

Friday, April 24, 2009

Dean's Writing Award Winners

With all the excitement surround Pesach, we didn't get a chance to announce the March winners of the Dean's Writing Contest. We again had the pleasure of choosing from lots of great selections covering many different topics, many different genres, and from many different grades. This month's winner in the Judaic Studies category was 2nd grader Edya Finkelstein, and the winner in the General Studies category was 3rd grader, Shmuel Meir Perl. Click here to see the list of nominees and to read the work of each of the finalists.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Yom Ha-Shoah

The remarkable talents of our Torah MiTzion Kollel and our Bat Ami girls, as well as those of Moreh Shimshon, were on full display today's moving and thought-provoking Yom Ha-Shoah program. The program began with grades three through twelve entering a darkened gym through a "tunnel" of Holocaust pictures which helped them create mental picture of at least some element of the tragedy. With a visual image in mind, each student then lit a candle which, together with those of all of our other students, formed two Jewish stars.

The students then sat for a presentation which began with Yizkor for victims of the Nazi genocide then segued into a dramatic performance based on letters sent between brothers living on opposite sides of Europe as Hitler came to power. The presentation ended with a reading from a little girl who described her feeling upon entering a concentration camp followed by a chilling rendition of Ani Ma'amin and Ha-Tikvah.

To make the program even more personal, grades 7-12 then took part in an additional segment in which they traced the life story of a particular Jew through the Holocaust years and then came together to talk and discuss what the Holocaust means to them personally and to us as Jews.

Yasher kochachem to all to who helped put the program together.
Chametz that was in your possession over Pesach is no longer good after Pesach, but pictures that were in your possession (and never made it onto your blog) are definitely still good. So...here are some snapshots of the various programs and activities held throughout the school in the weeks leading up to our Pesach break in an effort to prepare our students for this yom tov. From the Early Childhood parents Pesach program to the Girls High School Yom Iyyun and everything in between, it was truly a special time of year.


Friday, April 3, 2009

2nd Grade Pesach Play

Words cannot describe the spectacular job our 2nd grade, under the direction of Morah Rachel, did on yesterday's Pesach play, so I'm hoping these clips can...

From 2nd Grade Pesach Play

From 2nd Grade Pesach Play

From 2nd Grade Pesach Play

From 2nd Grade Pesach Play

From 2nd Grade Pesach Play




For more pictures from the play click here.