FAR
ROCKAWAY, NY— Yeshiva Darchei Torah was privileged to welcome the
Honorable Betsy DeVos, the secretary of education of the United States,
for a tour
of its campus on Wednesday morning. Ms. DeVos made history as the
first-ever head of the federal Department of Education to visit a
yeshiva since the cabinet-level post was established in 1980.
Secretary
DeVos, a lifelong champion of school choice, was led on a panoramic
tour of Yeshiva Darchei Torah’s 9-acre campus that showcased several
salient
aspects of the Yeshiva’s world-renowned educational experience.
Accompanying her were Rabbi Yaakov Bender, rosh hayeshiva; Mr. Ronald
Lowinger, president; Rabbi Moshe Bender, associate dean; Rabbi Eli
Biegeleisen, director of community engagement; and Rabbis
Chaim Dovid Zwiebel and Abba Cohen of Agudath Israel of America.
The
first stop was a third-grade classroom, where the rebbi was in the
midst of a lesson on the shivas haminim. Using props from plastic fruit
to freshly
baked cookies, the rebbi ensured that the lesson came to life—and
Secretary DeVos clearly enjoyed following along. She was shown the
room’s SMART Board, one of many throughout the building, as an example
of the Yeshiva’s successful integration of technology
in the classroom.
Further
down the hallway, Ms. DeVos entered the Yeshiva’s Willens Literacy
Library, where she sat down and joined the fourth grade boys in learning
about
poetry.
The
Secretary’s next stop was to one of the crown jewels of Yeshiva Darchei
Torah, the Rabenstein Learning Center, where she witnessed some of the
300
students with special-education needs who regularly receive tutoring,
therapy and self-contained classroom instruction within the school
setting.
After
stopping in on a sixth grade class that was studying Gemara, the tour
moved across the campus to the Weiss Vocational Center, a trailblazing
program
where a select cadre of Mesivta students spend part of their afternoons
learning trades such as carpentry, plumbing, electrical contracting and
home wiring—in addition to a core curriculum that includes math,
sciences and language arts. The Secretary was shown
a fully-functioning bathroom built from top-to-bottom by the students
and watched as a talmid soldered an iron pipe. Another talmid presented
her with a gift: a skillfully hand-crafted wooden cutting board with an
American flag motif.