A few weeks ago I attended a conference on technology in Jewish Education. One exciting part of the conference was the attention the Pardes Treehouse received. Our blog was highlighted during a pre-conference technology boot camp as a model of how a religious school can engage families in classroom learning. Later in the conference our blog was also featured in a technology showcase, where participants could come, see our blog, learn about how we created it and how we maintain it. Educators from across the country were impressed not only with our blog but also with the content of our school! Several educators asked me if they could start following our blog to learn about new educational ideas for their school. This was personally very gratifying; the blog has been one of my pet projects this past year. I would love to hear from you what you think of our blog. After each posting there is a place for comments. I invite you to comment. Myself, as well a s all the teachers who blog, would love to hear from those of you who are following us.
Jennifer Newfeld, Director of Congregational Learning
Friday, February 25, 2011
Friday, February 18, 2011
Mini-Minyan
Have you heard about Mini-Minyan? It's our new hit monthly Shabbat Children's service. Mini-Minyan meets the second Shabbat of each month (except in March it will be the third) at 10:30am. It's perfect for Religious School and Day School students in K-3rd grades. We've had a total of 30 participants in our first 5 months. and many of those return month after month and make up our core of Minyanairs. During Mini-Minyan, we read stories, create a pray community, share what's happening in our lives, act a bit silly and a bit serious, pretend we are trees and generally expereince a wonderful Shabbat service together. It has quickly become my favorite Saturday morning of the month. Join us, next Mini-Minyan is March 20th.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
World Wide Wrap
This morning, Kitah Dalet (4th grade) joined the morning minyan wearing the mock T’fillin that created with the help of our Men’s Club. It was great to walk into the Chapel this morning and see not only our fourth graders all wrapped up, but so many of their parents participating as well. What a beautiful introduction for our students to this mitzvah. Several of our 7th and 10th graders joined as well making me think that maybe we need to make this an annual activity for the school, not just for the fourth grade. So once each class builds their T’fillin in fourth grade, the students and their parents would be invited back each year to “rewrap.” Thank you to the men’s club for making this morning possible, thank you to Claire Hack, our wonderful Kitah Dalet teacher and thank you to all the parents and students who joined us for this special morning. Want to see B’nai Amoona on the on the World Wide Wrap page, click http://www.worldwidewrap.org/reported.html
See you for the next wrap on Feb. 5, 2012.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Our Madrichim are amazing. We have 19 working in Pardes this year and they are simply fabulous. Madrichim are the teenage assistants who work in our classes, shadow our students and assist in our office and resource room. They work one on one and with small groups, lead classroom activities and are amazing dugmaot, role models.
Our madrichim program keeps our teens connected, involved and role modeling. It provides them with job skills that they can take to college and a refresher of their Jewish knowledge. It provides our students a whole group of “cool” teenagers for them to look up to and learn from, and it allows our student-teacher ratio in our K-7th grade classrooms to be around one to five.
A parent recently commented to me that their children love the Madrichim who have been in their classes. The parent then asked, “How do you manage to get teens here that early, 8:30am, on a Sunday morning.”
How do we do it? Interesting, we had more teens apply to be Madrichim then we actually had positions for this year (although since it is such a great experience, we quickly created valuable positions for everyone who was interested.) Another little known secret, we teach our Madrichim that if they want to be dugmaot they must be continuing learners themselves. Therefore all of our Madrichim are enrolled in some form of Jewish education. We love our Madrichim!
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