I was so excited when Max informed me that we were going to be part of the vision documentation project!
Max came last week and did a fabulous in-service with our staff on Jewish Ethics and values in our classrooms. While we have always stressed ethical and moral behavior in our classrooms, with the exception of one of our 3 year old classes we have not focused on labeling most of these values. We have always labeled Tikun Olam and Tzedakah but we have not labeled other values consistently.
As we were processing "Why are Jewish Values important in the life our classrooms?" some of the comments teachers made were:
- They help us live a life of meaning,
- Shalom Bayit
- God gave us the values and laws, more laws than any other people-a blue print to live by.
Max helped us process and focus on the importance of including the Hebrew names of Jewish Values as well as incorporating as many Jewish Values into daily classroom activities and curriculum as possible.
Today in her weekly newsletter to the parents, one of the preK teachers reported her class would be focusing on Derech Eretz-common courtesy, treating every person with respect. This is a very appropriate and timely value to teach preK kids second semester, as they are getting testy with adults as well as their classmates! The other beauty of this newsletter note is we are teaching many of the parents as we teach the children.
Tomorrow in our weekly staff meeting we will be talking about how each class will be enriching their future curriculum.
Please check back as we continue down this road of growing and improving our wonderful school!
Hi Judy,
ReplyDeleteI'm so excited to see how all your teachers really bring Jewish values to the forefront in their classes. I checked out that book your teacher uses: "Raising a Mensch: How to Bring Up Ethical Children in Today's World" by Shelley Kapnek Rosenberg and it looks very promising. I can't wait for my copy to arrive.
There are lots of reasons to use labels for the values you are teaching in your classroom, from turning your classroom into more of a literary environment than it already is to bringing attention to to these important values (for the kids AND for their parents!). Kudos to you for making this shift. Love you Judy!!! Next time we see you, we'll have to teach you our "B'tzelem Elohim" song, ok?
ReplyDeleteEllen,
ReplyDeleteIs there a link to the song B'tzelem Elohim? I would love to hear it!
Is it on a CD?