Hebrew school enrollment across US down by nearly half since 2006, report says
(JTA) — Living in Brooklyn, surrounded by synagogues and Jewish schools, Rachel Weinstein White and her husband hoped to find a place where their children could receive a Jewish education for a few hours each week.
But they knew they didn’t want to enroll at a traditional Hebrew school associated with a local synagogue. For one thing, White wasn’t interested at the time in participating in prayer services, the main offering of most congregations. Plus, her husband is Black and not Jewish, and they were not sure how well he or their children would be welcomed.
So about eight years ago, she started her own program together with a few families, setting up a cooperative and hiring a teacher in an early version of the “learning pods” that would become a pandemic fad.
“It was just this incredible, magical year,” White said. “So many people started hearing about our little class and asked to join that it became necessary to create a second class. … It just kind of grew organically from there.”
Today, the school, Fig Tree, enrolls about 350 children across three locations and plans are underway to expand further. In hour-long classes on Sundays and weekday afternoons, children learn about Jewish holidays and history, engage in art and creative play, explore their local Jewish communities and learn basic Hebrew, in a program that culminates in a b’nai mitzvah year. It overlaps significantly with traditional Hebrew schools, but outside the usual setting — a synagogue classroom — that has become a cultural shorthand among American Jews for rote, uninspiring Jewish education.
That dynamic may be why Fig Tree is an outlier in a stark trend revealed in a new report: Enrollment in supplemental Jewish schools — those that students attend in addition to regular schooling in public or secular private schools — is down by nearly half over the last 15 years.
Even as the estimated number of Jewish children in the United States rose by 17% between 2000 and 2020, enrollment in Hebrew schools fell by at least 45% between 2006 and 2020, according to the report by the Jewish Education Project, a nonprofit that promotes educational innovation and supports Jewish educators in a wide array of settings.
The report identifies pockets of growth, mostly in the small number of programs like Fig Tree that operate outside of or adjacent to synagogues, and in schools operated by the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitch movement. But overall, according to the report, just 141,000 children attend supplemental Jewish schools in the United States and Canada, down from more than 230,000 in 2006 and 280,000 in 1987.
Some of the decline in Hebrew school enrollment is countered by increasing enrollment in Jewish day schools, where students study Jewish topics for at least part of every day. The number of U.S. children attending Jewish day schools has risen by roughly the same amount, 90,000, that Hebrew school enrollment has fallen since 2006, according to the report, though a significant portion of the increase stems from population growth in Orthodox communities, where the vast majority of students attend day schools.
Miriam Heller Stern, a professor at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion who was tapped to help design the study, said the results suggest that, as with many aspects of religious life today, Hebrew school enrollment cannot be counted on as an act of obligation or tradition.
“There’s this idea that parents send their kids to Hebrew school because they went to Hebrew school and that’s a rite of passage in North America, but that may be a myth,” she said. “People don’t want to push their kids to have to do the same thing they did, necessarily, anymore.”
The report speculates about what has fueled the enrollment decline — from demographic changes to shifts in how American Jews think about countering antisemitism to increased access to Jewish learning online — and also about what has allowed some schools to thrive. It notes that all of the supplemental schools that responded to its census said their schools help children feel connected to the Jewish people.
“We believe that many factors have led to the decline in enrollment of students in supplemental schools in the last decade,” said David Bryfman, the Jewish Education Project’s CEO. “However, it’s also a myth that all supplemental schools don’t work.”
The group is planning a series of online sessions with some of the dozens of researchers and practitioners involved in the report, with one goal the sharing of success stories identified by the survey. Of the six identified in the report, a common theme is urging experiential, community-based learning. Some of the promising models explicitly position themselves as infusing Jewish content into child care, filling a pressing need for American families.
Still, it may be hard to counter the demographic realities of contemporary American Jews: Just a third of U.S. Jews in a 2020 survey said someone in their household was a member of a synagogue. That was the case even for the majority of non-Orthodox Jews who said they identified with a particular denomination, a marker of traditional engagement.
The waning of synagogue affiliation is borne out in the Jewish Education Project’s report, which found that more than 700 supplemental schools shuttered between 2006 and 2020 — most outright, though as many as 200 have survived in a new form after merging.
Temple Solel, a small Reform congregation in Fort Mill, South Carolina, shut down its Hebrew school in recent years. The volunteer-run program had up to eight students at a time, according to Russ Cobe, a lay leader.
“We sort of hit a point where we weren’t able to sustain it,” Cobe said. “We only had a couple of people teaching and students from a wide range of ages and they wouldn’t show up every week. Also, our wheelhouse seems to be retirement age and above. We don’t have a lot of young families.”
Hebrew school mergers offer one possible approach to countering the enrollment decline. Two synagogues, one Reform and one Conservative, located half a mile apart in Oak Park, Michigan, established a joint school about seven years ago and called it Yachad, which means “together” in Hebrew.
“One day a week we meet at the Conservative congregation and one day a week we meet at the Reform congregation, so we are keeping our kids involved in both,” said Gail Greenberg, Yachad’s director. “My goal is to make it at the highest common denominator. For example, all of our food is kosher so anyone who wants to eat here can.”
The arrangement appears to be working. Last year, about 90 students were enrolled, and this year, enrollment is at 128, including 26 new kindergarteners, with even larger numbers expected in the future.
Another set of programs has grown dramatically in recent years: those affiliated with the Chabad movement, which tend to operate even when small and cost less than synagogue programs. Since 2006, the study says Chabad’s market share in terms of enrollment has grown from 4% to 10%, and in terms of the number of schools from 13% to 21%.
Those figures might represent an undercount, according to Zalman Loewenthal, director of CKids, the Chabad network of children’s programs. While the study says there are some 300 Chabad programs in the United States, Loewenthal said he is aware of at least 500 and perhaps as many as 600 — a number driven up in the last decade amid a push by Chabad to launch more Hebrew schools. His count is based on the number of customers purchasing the curriculum offered by his organization, which is also new in the last decade and in his view has contributed to improved quality among Chabad Hebrew schools.
In general, non-traditional approaches to Jewish education may be attractive at a time when American families have packed schedules and competing needs, according to Stern.
“People want to be able to have bite-sized pieces just like you sign up for a six-weeks art class, they might want a six-weeks Jewish class,” she said. “In this atmosphere, some communities are finding ways to be more modular and more flexible, and meet people’s needs in different ways.”
Stern also said, referring to six programs highlighted in the study as success stories, that the future calls for programs to offer an “immersive” experience, meaning that children become part of a community.
“They are getting something beyond just knowledge,” Stern said. “They’re also getting connection and belonging, which provides the foundation for something bigger in their lives.”
Stern said she thought the report pointed to gaps in the way American Jewish communities allocate their resources.
“Supplementary education really was abandoned as a communal priority,” she said. “Individual communities had to find ways to fund it on their own. And I think that is part of why we’re seeing a decline.”
Bryfman said he’s optimistic, both about the power of supplemental schools and the potential for them to generate new support from Jewish donors.
The Jewish Education Project had sought outside funding to pay for its study and failed, he said. But now that the numbers are clear, he is beginning to see interest from philanthropies.
“I don’t want to count the dollars before they’re granted,” Bryfman said. “But the study is already beginning to have the desired effect of bringing more resources to the field.”
Fig Tree isn’t set up to benefit in a possible future of increased charitable investments in Jewish education. That’s because the school is set up as a business — an expression of confidence in its growth and to insulate itself from the vagaries of philanthropy.
“It’s a very unusual model for the Jewish education and I would argue a self-sustaining one,” White said. “We don’t have to rely on fundraising… and we’re not beholden to some of the other requirements that a nonprofit would necessitate, which allows us to be nimble.”
There is an authenticity to Chabad that the non-religious don't have.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was a kid, the local USY chapter had trouble getting teens to turn out for programs. I explained over and over that it was because their programs were identical to things lots of secular organizations run in the community and frankly, they did it better. So why would kids come out to a second rate USY program?
Why would parents wants to send their kids to a Jewish school that doesn't teach Judaism?
They are notorious for accepting children who are not halachically Jewish and "converting" them by integrating them into their community!
ReplyDeleteIf I wanted a dead moshiach I would join a Christian church!
ReplyDeletePaul, it all comes down to the same argument - if you don't like their product, compete with it.
ReplyDeleteLook at Israel - the secular left had 1-2 children for 3 generations while the right and the religious had 4-12 and now the left is a minority and crying about it. You don't like it? Have more children! And the same thing here: you don't like Chabad's school system? Compete with it on their level.
Help me out with the name --- "Jews for Menachem Mendel"?
ReplyDeleteSo it doesn't exist anymore (I just checked) but there use to a a website - www.jewsformendel.com. If you went there it was a picture of JC on the cross and the caption was "Right idea, wrong guy!" along with a link to chabad.org
ReplyDeleteWhen all is said and done - history will judge him as a manipulative brilliant lunatic!
ReplyDeleteWas a he a lunatic though? He had a belief - he was the saviour of the Jewish people. And what would that mean? That he was going to restore our true independence and usher in an era of world peace not through the threat of violence but through love of God. For all we disagree with the idea that he was the Moshiach, we have to acknowledge that he wanted to peacefully make the world better.
ReplyDeleteHe was the saviour of the Jewish people.
ReplyDelete>>>>>
Unprecedented in Jewish thought...Who told him? Who authorized it? Must have been HKBH ----
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3hrjEu21Ac
ReplyDeleteReally weird that to tackle the Heshy Goldstein fraud, the panel is run by Brenner who is a convicted criminal who massered on others to get a lighter sentence & then getting major input from Zablocki who is no angel either.
Kings Supreme Court
Index Number: 507373/2021
Case Name: VASHOVSKY, CHANA vs. ZABLOCKI, YOSEF et al
Case Type: Comm-Contract
Track: Standard
RJI Filed: 05/27/2021
Look up in this lawsuit, the affadavit of Rabbi Podolsky of Machane Yehuda, who rented the Hudson Valley Resort in Kerhonkson from Zablocki who supplied useless Kashrus "mashgichim" & spoiled food. The plaintiff Vashovsky has an ikkul against Zablocki provided the Court, that he's ignoring, from Badatz of Lakewood.
I'm surprised at Zev Brenner giving him a forum to pedal his outrageous lies!
ReplyDelete> Who told him? Who authorized it?
ReplyDeleteAnd if it was? Look, if a dictator comes to power in the US tomorrow and forces through changes in the law that end corruption, improve social assistance and creates a national public health care system for all, will you go out and protest "But I want to vote!"?
You're missing the point. How many nut cases in our history claimed that HKBH has spoken to them directly? Nobody heard it but them. The fact is that he's dead and he created a religion that is "similar" to Judaism but not Judaism. Who knows where this ends up?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTe3yjkGQ5Y
ReplyDeleteHeshy Goldstein comes across like a narcissist in part 3
Pesach Ponzi:
ReplyDeleteParagraph Number 3 of Chana Vashovsky's Complaint:
" After entering into a contract to purchase the hotel, and having had no experience in running a hotel …."
This basically tells me 90% of what I need to know; most of the rest is just commentary.
https://iapps.courts.state.ny.us/fbem/DocumentDisplayServlet?documentId=bG82MzhQ2pzzmLGWP2yBXA==&system=prod
Again, Paul, where does it end up? If it ends up with the masses running around looking to be decent and do good deeds while observing the mitzvos, how is that a bad thing?
ReplyDelete"Do you not know that a false pretender to prophecy is liable to capital punishment, for having arrogated to himself unwarranted distinction, just as the person who prophesies in the name of idols is put to death, as we read in Scripture "But the prophet that shall speak a word presumptuously in My name, which I have not commanded him to speak, or that shall speak in the name of other gods, that same prophet shall die." (Deuteronomy 18:20). What better evidence is there of his mendacity, than his very pretensions to be the Messiah."
ReplyDeletehttp://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2022/08/do-you-not-know-that-false-pretender-to.html