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Early Childhood Education

  • A Story About Values, About Israel, and About Israeli Early Childhood Centers During the War see more

    A Story About Values, About Israel, and Israeli Early Childhood Centers During the War

     

    This week I went to help create early learning centers for displaced families in Israel with an incredible volunteer organization called Brothers and Sisters for Israel. While there, I shared a Zoom link and went live every hour for several minutes to provide educators from the United States and Canada with a sneak peek to see in real-time what has been happening these days in Israel, and how pop-up schools are being created.
     

    The connection between Israel and our nation in the diaspora is very important to me and I feel privileged that my role in Remini continues to enable me to further these connections, as well as to create bridges. It adds a lot of value to what I do, and I feel it is a shlihoot (mission) of mine.
     

    Stacey Gabriel, from Temple Beth Avodah in Newton, Massachusetts, joined one of the live sessions I did while creating the pop-up schools. I am honored to be asked to share about it in the ECE-RJ newsletter. I have so many stories to share related to what is happening with preschools in Israel during this time.
     

    Before I begin, I want to highlight what I believe is at the core of what is happening in Israel right now, which is centered around the values of accountability, responsibility for one another, solidarity, taking initiative, creativity, and taking control of our destiny (one of the fundamental principles in a democratic culture). As I am writing this, I feel the tears starting to fall.
     

    These values are being reflected throughout the country in so many ways. Here are just a few examples:

    • I recently had a conversation with Hagit, a preschool teacher in one of the pop-up preschools for displaced families in Tel Aviv. Hagit shared with me that she left her job as a university education professor to be a preschool teacher at the pop-up school. I did not ask, but I am assuming she chose this path without a salary. 
    • On the way to the funeral of a soldier who died, I observed residents of the city lined up from the house of the family to the cemetery, with Israeli flags to show solidarity, honor, and respect. 
    • I spoke with Reut, a volunteer responsible for a certain area in Israel, where she is taking care of all the displaced families' needs in this area (each area has its own designated volunteer). One of her recent projects was to provide refrigerators and washing machines to them.
    • Omri, a person of strength and someone close to me, left his wife and small child to fight in the reserves, after losing his brother only several weeks ago.
    • Attending the Shiva of a family that lost a loved one with the understanding that it is a very small family, and they need to feel the love and support all around them.

     

    As you can imagine I can go on and on and on and on….

    Those values are also reflected strongly in the early childhood community through the creation of pop-up preschools for displaced families. These pop-up preschools would not be possible without the organization Brothers and Sisters for Israel, established on October 7th, 2023. They are an amazing group of volunteers who support and work to fill all the needs and gaps related to the war. Right now, displaced families face many challenges, one of which is the ability to receive early childhood services. Brothers and Sisters for Israel have created a division under their umbrella whose sole purpose is to create high-quality early childhood services for the displaced communities. This group includes incredible leaders (all volunteers), who have been working from the beginning of the war, to accomplish this goal. This group continues to receive many requests for needed pop-up preschools. I have been honored to join this group as a volunteer to help create these preschools. 
     

    The following is a window into what it is like to create one of these pop-up preschools. Before establishing a new preschool, a lot of preparation work is done. This begins with understanding the space inside the hotels that the hotels can offer, and how to make them suitable for the children’s needs. For example, one hotel allocated several regular rooms. In each room, a different learning center was created, and the children would rotate between the different rooms. The next steps include designing what each classroom will look like (volunteer architects and pedagogists are doing this), and understanding what equipment must be ordered for each classroom, age group, etc.
     

    Once this is all done, it is time to start doing the physical work of putting the preschools together. These creation days begin with sorting the equipment each preschool location will get and driving in the volunteers by minibus. Volunteers include people of all ages, ranging in age from early 20s through 80s. After the volunteers were assembled, we split up into different locations. Usually, multiple preschools are created at the same time. In each location, the architect who created the design is the head manager, and in each classroom, there is a “manager.” My job includes doing whatever is needed, e.g. carrying equipment, transferring equipment, organizing equipment, or putting together classroom equipment like desks and strollers for the dolls.
     

    While volunteering, I get a better understanding of the situation. I have the opportunity to speak with the displaced families and understand where they are from, and where they are currently living. In many cases, an entire family gets one room, which is not easy. Some were moved as a community, and some as individuals. The most rewarding part is seeing their faces when the work is completed! This makes all the difference.

    I want to conclude with a children's song that is taught here in early childhood centers and reflects exactly what I wrote about. We are all building Israel together.

    My land of Israel is beautiful and flourishing.

    Who built and who planted it?

    We all did it together!

     

    The song on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2cjj9IRfqg

     

    Raz Wasserstein

    Owner of Remini
     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     February 01, 2024
  • Jennifer Schiffer posted an article
    As the end of the school year nears, we wanted to highlight the“best of” professional development. see more

    In the world of early childhood education, this year felt very much like a new chapter for our schools. It has been a time for rebuilding, for establishing new norms and for coming together after two long COVID years kept us apart. This year, in-person meetings and conferences provided us with ways to make meaningful connections once again with other Jewish educators, to learn from one another, to ask questions and to seek answers together.

    As we near the end of the school year, we wanted to highlight some of the “best of” professional development workshops and trainings. As a community of lifelong learners, one of our goals as an organization has always been to share our collective knowledge with one another, and to provide a system of support for Jewish early childhood educators to continue honing their craft.

    Without further ado, here are a few highlights from this year:

    We are looking forward to the joint ECE-RJ/ARJE Conference in Memphis, Tennessee, which is scheduled for January 22-24, 2024. Conferences are one of the most meaningful ways in which to not only learn together as a community of Jewish educators, but also provide a landscape for us to connect with one another. We hope you will save the date for what we know will be an amazing experience for all who are lucky enough to attend.

    Jen Schiffer

    Director, The Community Synagogue L’Dor V’Dor Early Childhood Center