The Kohelet Prize Database

Database Entries Tagged with: Jewish History

The Story of Our People: From One Generation to the Next

A keynote project in which students create professional documentaries based on the "Survivor Circles" experience & showcased in a beautiful community-wide Film Festival as the hallmark of a newly written literacy-based, student-centered curriculum for Modern Jewish History that integrates academic skills with primary sources.

By: Anna Bolman from Fuchs Mizrachi School

Grade(s): 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, Middle school, High school

Subject(s) of entry: History, Literature, Social Studies

Pedagogy: Experiential Education, PBL - project based learning, UBD - understanding by design, 21st Century Skills

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From History to memory

An innovative program in our middle school: a multi-disciplinary. multi-grade curriculum that will help our students understand the meaning of Holocaust. We currently are implement a new curriculum for each grade of middle school includes projects, meaningful first-person accounts and personal student reflections.

By: Stephenie Samuels , Jack Fidler, Megan Hemliton , Roberta Writh , Barak Cerf, Benji Hain , Hal Borkow, Dana Bar-or , from Maimonides

Grade(s): 6, Middle school

Subject(s) of entry: English/ Writing/ Language Arts

Pedagogy: PBL - project based learning

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The Modern Jewish Woman

Students study texts as they learn about the shifts in the cultural and religious roles of women. This is taught concurrently in both Judaic studies (Rabbinic Literature) and Modern Jewish History classes. Course culminates with students choosing elderly women of the community to interview and then represent in a community-wide celebratory exhibit.

By: Elie Ganz, Yehudis Benhamou from Scheck Hillel Community School, YULA Girls

Grade(s): 10, 11, 12, High school

Subject(s) of entry: Art, Gemara, Halacha, History, Philosophy/ Values/ Ethics/ Hashkafa, Social and Emotional Learning, Social Studies

Pedagogy: Blended Learning, Experiential Education, PBL - project based learning, Social and Emotional Learning

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What do Greece and Arizona Have in Common? Empowerment, Life Skills, and Meaningful Research

Students planned a trip to Greece to learn about literature, ancient history, and Jewish history, researching content, budgeting, fundraising, and halakhot. Success was met with disappointment when the trip was canceled for terrorism. Students regrouped, changing the destination to Arizona to research nature, American history, and the arts.

By: Rachel Harari from Magen David Yeshivah High School

Grade(s): 9, 10, 11, 12, Elementary school, High school

Subject(s) of entry: English/ Writing/ Language Arts, Halacha, History, literature

Pedagogy: Design-Thinking Model, PBL - project based learning, Social and Emotional Learning, Wholebrain Teaching, 21st Century Skills

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Jewish For Life: Dual Track Judaic Curriculum

Our Moreshet Yisrael track uses a thematic approach to teach traditional and modern sources in English whereas our Moreshet Torani track adheres to text-based learning in Hebrew. Regardless of track, when oral or midrashic traditions are introduced, they are taught with a clear understanding that even oral traditions are anchored to the text. There is a recognition among our teachers that many of the skills students develop in the serious pursuit of Judaic Studies (such as critical thinking, deductive reasoning, close reading of texts) can and will be employed in General Studies subjects such as language arts, science, and social studies.

By: Rabbi Reuven Travis from Atlanta Jewish Academy

Grade(s): 9, 10, 11, 12, High school

Subject(s) of entry: Art, Gemara, Halacha, History, Ivrit, Mishnah, Tanach

Pedagogy: IBL - inquiry based learning, 21st Century Skills

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Jewish History curriculum from the United Monarchy to the Talmud

This curriculum introduces students to an academic approach to Jewish history with the intention of enriching their study of traditional Jewish texts like the Tanakh and Talmud by offering context and background to these sources. Additionally, this curriculum will expose students to academic concepts and methods regarding Jewish studies that often come up in university courses. If done in a thoughtful way, this can blunt any potential surprises or discomfort students may have when these ideas come up on a secular campus.

By: Mr. Eitan Kastner from Frisch School

Grade(s): 9, 10, 11, 12, High school

Subject(s) of entry: History

Pedagogy:

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Intergenerational Oral History Project

Gann 11th graders studied 20th century U.S. history through the stories of Jewish elders. They learned skills in oral history, contextualized the elders' stories in the grander scheme of U.S. history, and developed a final project that applied their learning to their own lives.

By: Ms. Lily Rabinoff-Goldman, Mr. Yoni Kadden from Gann Academy

Grade(s): 9, 10, 11, 12, High school

Subject(s) of entry: History, Jewish Studies

Pedagogy: PBL - project based learning, 21st Century Skills

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Child Victim Project

Each year our Grade 6 students partake in a project that connects them to the lives of Jewish children who perished in the Holocaust.

These innocent victims who perished are honored and remembered by our students who retell their stories. Our students feel connected to their Jewish heritage and have a deeper and more meaningful understanding of the lives of those who lived before them.

By: Ms. Amy Taylor from Jewish Peoples and Peretz Schools (JPPS-BIALIK)

Grade(s): 6, Middle school

Subject(s) of entry: Art, History, Literature

Pedagogy: PBL - project based learning

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