1999-05-28 SDJA-Philosophy |
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By Donald H. Harrison San Diego, Calif. (special) -- The seamless integration of Judaic course work with secular studies has been -- and will continue to be -- a priority of the San Diego Jewish Academy as it expands its kindergarten through eighth grade program all the way through high school graduation. Headmaster Mike Kessel, who completes his tenure with the Academy at the end of next month, remembers that when he came to San Diego in 1990 after having served as education director for the United Herzliya School in Cape Town, South Africa, Jewish studies and secular studies were viewed as separate entities.
"In the fifth grade, for instance, we study American history. Growing up in public schools in this country, I never knew there were significant Jewish people in American history--their names never came up for me. And so we have integrated that so the kids would have a sense of pride. ...Even when we study Martin Luther King Day, which is a secular holiday, we relate it to other events of freedom for the Jews." Similarly, she said, "when we study Columbus discovering America, we bring in the Jewish portion and what was happening in Spain at that time, and talk about Marranos (converts who secretly retained their Judaism) and other things like that." Even in math courses, there are opportunities for integration, Rund said. Jewish foods are cooked using measurements. Also, "in mathematics we do a stock market unit, in which the kids buy stocks, but we will bring in a rabbi and talk about the ethics of the stock market. Would you make money on a stock that, for instance, raises tobacco or sells tobacco that might be harmful to people?" The incoming executive director for San Diego Jewish Academy is Larry Acheatal, who currently serves as superintendent of the 12-school, soon to be 13, South Bay Union Elementary School District, which serves 10,000 students. Acheatal said one reason he accepted a job running a school system with about 500 students--or 20 times as small--"was the realization that the children who go to this school and graduate from this school -- 99 percent of them are going to be leaders, whether it is in medicine, business, law or whatever field. So the only question is 'what kind of leaders are they going to be: what kind of business people, what kind of doctors, lawyers are they going to be?' Are they going to be people who exemplify strong Jewish values of concern for others and of giving back to the community -whether it is financial, time, effort, or resources?"
"I know what I did, and I see what my own children are doing," he commented. "Here (at public school) is real history; here (at religious school) is this Jewish stuff" the students tend to think. "Now there is an opportunity to present it the way it really is, which is interrelated." * * * Currently San Diego Jewish Academy operates two elementary school campuses, grades K-5, located at Tifereth Israel Synagogue in San Carlos and at Congregation Beth El in La Jolla. Additionally, a middle school, grades 6-8, is operated on the La Jolla campus. Although SDJA had a ninth grade class in the past, it allowed the program to lapse. But with the commitment to have a community high school, a ninth grade class will be offered this September. The students who enter the ninth grade class this September will become part of SDJA's first tenth grade class in the Year 2000; first 11th grade class in 2001 and the first 12th grade class in 2002. The high school's first graduation ceremony will be held in 2003. Charged with developing a qualitative program, which will be well respected by admissions officers of Ivy League colleges, is Dr. Jeff Davis, SDJA's first high school principal. Davis, currently the principal at Coronado High School, has "one of the top high schools in the country," according to Acheatal, who selected him. In the six years that Davis has been at Coronado, he has taken it "from a good high school--which one would expect from the socio-economics and demographics of that community-- to a National Blue Ribbon School (one of 166 in the country). "Then, just last year, Coronado was recognized from among the national blue ribbon schools as one of only seven in the country as a 'New American High School' by the U.S. Department of Education," Acheatal said. While the Judaic piece of the high school is important, "I believe a
high school will not be successful for the broadest base of the Jewish
community if the secular program isn't second to none," he added.
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