Find yourself a teacher,
acquire a friend to study with you.
Pirke Avot 1:6
Jewish
tradition has always honored the role of the teacher. The teacher
is considered as a parent, as one who gave life to the child. The
words "parent" and "teacher" are often used interchangeably, because
the transmission of Jewish learning is at the heart of Jewish living
and continuity. Travelers were advised not to live in a town that
did not have ashcan. Education was the responsibility of the entire
community and was valued by everyone in that community. Today, we
must seek out teachers for our children and teachers for ourselves.
Today, teachers face challenges that never existed before. Today,
schools must create communities of learners; communities of adults
who believe in lifelong learning and communities of families who
want to learn to support their Jewish identities. Teachers must
build new partnerships with the home and the synagogue, it the Jewish
future is to be assured. Jewish educators can build the bridges
between home, synagogue, and school, to meet the challenges of our
day.
History

In 1875, Hebrew Union College was launched as the first permanent
Jewish institution of higher learning in America. In 1950, HUC merged
with the Jewish Institute of Religion, created by Rabbi Stephen
S. Wise. Today, HUC-JIR has four vibrant centers of leaning in Cincinnati,
Jerusalem, Los Angeles, and New York, offering academic and professional
training for rabbis, cantors, educators, communal service professionals,
and scholars. Graduates of HUC-JIR serve as leaders in congregational,
school, community, organizational, military, and university settings
throughout the world.
The School of Education is launching a new, comprehensive, and
exciting program of study, providing a thorough grounding in Jewish
studies, Hebrew, and the theory and practice of Jewish education
through a mixture of formal classroom learning and supervised, experiential
learning. Situated in New York City, the preeminent laboratory for
learning, surrounded by the resources of major academic institutions,
museums, libraries, and cultural centers, the New York School of
Education has unique opportunities for internships, job placements,
and involvement with inspired practitioners.
This program, created with an eye on the future of Jewish education,
strives to meet the expectations of Jewish educational communities
in the New York area and around the country. Through the development
of an emerging generation of innovative Jewish educators, clinically
trained to work with families and adults in both formal and informal
settings, the new directions of the New York School of
Education will begin to transform the Jewish educational system.