Sometimes staying organized is a challenge! Staying organized as a teacher is especially challenging, because you have to remember a million things (what to teach, how to teach it, curriculum goals, student progress, volunteers etc...) Every shul will have a list of goals or even a full curriculum to follow. My shul in particular has a detailed list of goals, but no curriculum. So it's up to me to keep things straight! That is why I created this teacher planner. It helps me break down the yearly goals my shul outlines into manageable chunks. It also helps me keep track of each student's progress. Learning Hebrew is such an important part of a child's religious school education-- so it's super important for the teacher to keep tabs on struggling students so they don't just fall through the cracks. In this blog post, I will walk you through the different parts of the planner and how to use each one to it's fullest potential. Let's start with the basics. Print out your planner. You can punch holes in t it in a binder (super easy), or do something a little fancier. Personally, I prefer the binder. You can slip the cover page into the front cover of the binder. The planner starts with basic information. Just plug in the details of your particular shul and your class roster. The madrichim and parent volunteer page is really useful! I like to have Jewish holiday parties in my class. I always enlist the help of parent volunteers (for both their time and supplies)! It's always nice when your teacher remembers your birthday. This is a great way to keep track! The goals page is probably the most useful page. Here you will write the basic goals you have for your class. This should align with the goals your shul gave you! Here is my own personal goal page as an example. The one in the document is blank obviously. Next is the student data section. This will help you keep track of which kid learned what. You write the names of your students on the left side, and each skill you teach on the top. For example, you could write letter aleph and sound as a skill. You check off each box as the students demonstrate their mastery of each skill. You can use this page to help you write DETAILED progress reports. The students will benefit greatly if you can say something like, "Josh has mastered the letters aleph, bet, and lammed, but will need additional help on the letter yud. Here are some resources etc..." The calendar section will help you figure out when to teach each lesson. This section starts off with a Jewish Holiday Calendar. This will help you plan holiday lessons at the appropriate time! The year at a glance page is SUPER helpful. Go back and look at your yearly goals. Pick two or three that you want to tackle on a particular Sunday. For example, you can write: letter gimmel and learn oseh shalom. Just write a brief sentence-- something that will remind you WHAT you are going to teach that day. This is not the place to write about how you are going to do it (that comes later). Also, if you take the time to plan your entire month (or even year if you want) you'll make sure that you are on track by the end of the year. Finally we come to the most detailed part of this planner-- daily lesson plans. To use these pages, look back at your year at a glance. Use the sentence you wrote for each date as TODAY'S OBJECTIVE. When you figure out HOW you are going to teach/what activities you want to use, you can write them down in the DAILY PLAN section. Make sure to also write down any SUPPLIES that you'll need-- and of course BIRTHDAYS Side note: this planner is designed for teachers who hold their class on Sunday only. If your shul has a two day program (or does not meet on Sunday) no problem! I created a shorter version with no add in dates. Just photocopy/print the lesson pages as many times as you want. Download: 2016-2017 SUNDAY ONLY Hebrew School Teacher Planner 2016- 2017 TWO DAY PROGRAM Hebrew School Teacher Planner B'ahava, Elana
Review the concepts of tzedakah and mitzvah with this short, easy, and fun lesson plan that includes catchy songs and a meaningful activity.
Choose from a variety of engaging Hebrew worksheets for beginners that will help your students learn the alef bet and develop reading skills. Instant digital downloads make it easy to get started! Looking for fun and interactive Hebrew lesson plans for distance learning? You'll find a variety of resources here, perfect for upper elementary and middle school students.
Beginners conversational and written Hebrew for Christians and Messianic Jews. This lesson is on basic greetings and we will begin to introduce the aleph bet!
Introduce the Jewish holiday of Tu B'Shevat with this short and sweet 15 Minute Tu B'Shevat Lesson Plan that kids will enjoy in the classroom or at home.
Click here to get your first few weeks of school planned with these fun and interactive back to school activities and games, team building activities, ice breakers and more! These beginning of the year activities are great for 1st grade, 2nd grade, and 3rd grade. Don't forget to grab the FREE bucket filler activity!
Probably the most important symbol of the Passover Seder is the plate of specials foods, including a shank bone, haroset, bitter vegetable, parsley, a boiled egg and bitter herbs. Each item has an …
This post contains affiliate links, which means I earn a small commission for referring you to the products I mention here. See my full disclosure here if you're super-duper interested in learning more about that. How do you provide structure for your kids over the summer? Camp? Trips to the beach? Copious amounts of popsicles and screen time? All are valid answers, but for us it's been the same for the last 8 years. We put up a big world map on the wall and spend each week learning about a different country somewhere in the world. This week the kids picked Israel. Read here about how The Educational Summer Vacation accidentally started in 2012, and then read on for a recap of our week in Israel. Monday First things first: find Israel on the map (we have this giant wall map from Amazon) and fill out our passport pages. I made passport pages (free printable is here) for the kids years ago; my only regret is that I threw them away after the first several summers because I didn't know it was going to be an ongoing thing. I finally saved last year's passport pages, clipped them with a binder ring, and simply added more pages for this year. (Too bad I won't have my teenager's pages from 2012 with her wonky 8-year-old handwriting and misspellings, but at least I'll have it for my younger kids.) The kids colored the flag of Israel while we listened to the Israeli national anthem. Be careful, it just might bring you to tears. I particularly liked this video because it had a translation of the lyrics in English. This clip about Jerusalem from Shalom Sesame wasn't overly informative, but seeing Grover got the little kids interested enough to sit still for this overview of the sites in Israel: For dinner I tried my hand at some of the national dishes, and all I can say is: where has Israeli cooking been all my life?? In Israel, I guess. I'm just mad I didn't know about it. Tonight, I made falafel balls and put them in pitas with lettuce, cucumber, tomatoes, yogurt, and feta cheese. It was delicious and super-easy and will definitely become a regular meal at our house from now on. Get in my belly. Tuesday Over the last 8 summers, I've given dozens of crash courses in different world languages, and never have I been as intimidated by a language as I was by Hebrew. Even when we did Hungarian, and that's saying something. Every Internet tutorial I saw promised to help you "learn the aleph bet in just 40 minutes!" (Forty minutes? For the ABCs?) After watching the video, I understood why it took 40 minutes. Hebrew is complicated. The kids and I did our best to copy down the letters in this simplified video, and after we sweated through it the kids were at least able to recognize some of the aleph bet in this musical alphabet video. My 4-year-old initially refused to participate because "it was dumb and boring," but then he changed his mind. He asked me to pull up a picture of the aleph bet and I let him copy letters to his heart's content. When he was finished I asked him to hold his paper in front of his belly so I could take a picture, and being a 4-year-old boy, he turned around and put it on his rear end. I'll take what I can get. True to its complicated form, even counting to 10 in Hebrew isn't simple. Lots of languages have masculine and feminine nouns, but Hebrew also has masculine and feminine numbers depending on what you're counting! Even after looking it up I wasn't sure which one to use if you're just abstractly counting to 10, but I think you'd use the feminine so we went with that. I love musical teaching videos. (We learned an Arabic song about counting camels years and years ago, and I can still count to 10 in Arabic today because of it.) After we'd learned our numbers, the kids scattered to various devices and played an online number matching game or a type-the-phone-number game. For dinner that night, I made a slightly adapted chicken shawarma. Mmmm. We put it in wraps with cucumber, tomatoes, lettuce, and tahini sauce. I wish I'd taken a picture of the assembled wraps for the blog, but they looked and tasted so delicious I devoured two of them before I even remembered I had a blog. For the rest of the week, the kids had to say 'please' and 'thank you' in Hebrew. My 8-year-old really got into the spirit, because later that day in the car I asked her to call a sibling at home. When they picked up, she told them "Mom says to turn on the oven. Toda! (thank you)" Wednesday After briefly going over the Israel-Palestine conflict with the older kids while the younger kids picked their noses and complained about how bored they were, we spent the rest of today talking about archaeology. Israel is rich in archaeological sites, mostly because it's been an important place for civilizations since basically the dawn of time. The younger kids enjoyed this Sesame Street segment on archaeology, and the older kids were interested in this video about 7 important archaeological finds made in Israel. Then we watched an episode of Bill Nye The Science Guy and let me tell you, the amount of hilarity in this show is directly proportional to how old you are. I'd gone to the dollar store that morning and bought a plain white bowl or plate for each of the kids. Handing out Sharpies, I told them to decorate theirs as if it had been made by someone in another culture and/or time, either real or made-up. In the woods in front of our house, we placed each one in a shallow hole, smashed it with a hammer, and covered it with dirt. Highlight of his day, hands down. Each kid switched places with another kid, and I gave out shovels and dollar store brushes to help them excavate and clean all the pieces they could recover. I'd planned to have them fill out this archaeology record from Blue House Homeschool and be all official about it, but it was about to rain and it was almost dinnertime and we were in a hurry, and sometimes done is better than perfect. They brought their collection bags indoors and sat down at the table to piece their artifact together (the 4-year-old was NOT happy about not having every piece, but that's archaeology, buddy.) A rare reconstruction of an archaeological artifact with the original Dollar Tree price tag still attached! After they put together the plate or bowl, they had to guess from the decorations what culture theirs had come from. My 14-year-old and 12-year-old made up a culture, my 8-year-old did ancient Egyptian, and my 16-year-old used the elves from Lord of the Rings. Thursday For a country the size of New Jersey, it's impressive that the capital of Israel is a holy city to three major religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. (Four, if you count Baháʼí.) We decided to review two religions today and two tomorrow. Today was Judaism and Christianity. We reviewed what we knew about Judaism with the nonfiction book What Do We Know About Judiasm? and the picture book A is for Abraham: A Jewish Family Alphabet. This video helped us learn about the importance of the Western Wall of the Jewish temple site in Jerusalem, also known as the Wailing Wall. We ran out of time to watch a library DVD I'd gotten called Lights: The Miracle of Chanukah, which looks like a cute 25-minute animated thing my little ones would enjoy at some point when we have time. When we switched gears and talked about Christianity, I figured it was a perfect time to brush up on our New Testament geography. How often do you look at the maps in the back of your Bible? If you're me, the answer is never. So I actually learned a lot from this activity. With the help of this website, I made a list of Christian sites of importance in Israel. The kids looked up place names from the list in the Bible Dictionary at the back of their scriptures to learn what happened there and why it was important, and then they located it on a map of Israel. Using a printable map of Isreal like the ones found here, the kids used sticky jewels to mark places of importance from the New Testament like Bethlehem, Nazareth, Capernaum, Qsar al Yahud (the place where Christ was baptized in the Jordan River,) and Jerusalem. We also found the Sea of Galilee, which isn't really a sea and today is called Lake Tiberias. #themoreyouknow For extra reading (because who doesn't love homework during summer vacation?) I gave the kids the books What are the Ten Commandments? and Who Was Jesus? from the Who Is book series, which I am currently in love with. Dinner tonight put a damper on my newfound love for Israeli food. I had high expectations for this shakshuka, but sadly it didn't taste nearly as good as it looked. In fact, it was kind of gross. I'm completely prepared to admit it might not have been the recipe's fault and maybe I just made it wrong, but I can't foresee us trying it again in the future so I guess we'll never know. Friday Today we covered the Islam and Baháʼí faiths. We reviewed what we knew about Islam, both from "visiting" previous Muslim countries and from going to open mosque day at a local mosque a few years ago. We also checked out the book Islam from the Eyewitness Books series. Jerusalem is the third holiest city to Muslims because it's the place where Mohammed ascended to heaven. The Dome of the Rock, which we learned about in this video, is built on the site. Baháʼí is one of the world's youngest religions, founded in the 1860s. I stumbled on this lovely animated video explaining its beliefs (start at 4:25 because he rambles,) narrated by the guy who plays Dwight Schrute on The Office. The Baháʼí World Centre is in Haifa, Israel. We looked here for an explanation of the different buildings on the site, and then watched this drone video of the Baháʼí gardens at Haifa. Saturday The last thing to talk about was music. We'd been listening to Klezmer music at dinner, and watched a mini-documentary about it (even though the guy they interviewed was Russian instead of Israeli.) Then we learned about the horah dance that is done at Jewish weddings. My 14-year-old said she did this at her friend's bat mitzvah last year, too. We watched this clip from a random couple's wedding reception to see what it looked like (thanks Sheila and Rob, whoever you are!) and then tried to follow this tutorial: It basically turned into everyone standing in a circle kicking each other, but we tried. The famous violinist Itzhak Perlman is from Tel-Aviv, Israel. He's so amazing. My kids thought it was fun to watch him on Sesame Street (why was there so much Sesame Street this week?) and I couldn't believe this video of him playing Dance of the Goblins. Seriously. Our family was gifted a year subscription to Masterclass and I noticed there's a class there taught by Itzhak Perlman, so I encouraged my violinist 14-year-old to take it. A few other books I gave my kids to look at this week included: The Golden City: Jerusalem's 3,000 Years by Neil Waldman Daily Life in Ancient and Modern Jerusalem by Diane Slavik Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood by Ibtisam Barakat I was pretty intimidated to do Israel for our Educational Summer Vacation this year. I didn't think I'd be able to do justice to the rich history and sacred sites of Israel, and I probably didn't, but I tried the best I could and we enjoyed it. And thanks to that catchy number song, I'll remember how to count to 10 in Hebrew for the rest of my life. Click to Share:
Test your memory and match the correct colours with the correct hebrew letters.
Teach your children how they have the ability and power to save the world with this easy tikkun olam lesson plan that focuses on individual mitzvot.
Hi there! Looking for some “Learn Hebrew Podcasts” to listen to? Good! I’ve scoured iTunes and compiled a list for you. Below, you’ll find the …
Like other CC bloggers, I'm very excited to have a place to record my plans for each week. I'm hoping to look back to my planning posts, mak...
Make your teacher life easier with these printable, editable set of templates for your Jewish/Hebrew classroom. This set is chock full of useful Star of David cards, task cards, name plates, newsletters, lesson planning, weekly planning and vocabulary templates. There are countless uses and the best part is that you never run out! Just add a text box, and type or hand-write on these! This is part of our Groovy Daisy Collection. Check out all the Jewish Classroom Decor in this collection! Use year after year! This is a Google Slide file that is editable. You will receive a PDF with a clickable link to make your own copy of the Google Slide. You can print right right from there! This is for personal use only and can be printed as many times as you wish for your own classroom. The terms of use is included with the file. This is an instant download after payment clears. No physical product will be shipped. No refunds or exchanges. If there is a problem or have a question, please reach out to us. All rights reserved by ©CreateDecorateEducate, LLC
This Goal Setting Craft helps students express the goals that they have set for themselves in an artful, creative way that becomes a beautiful bulletin board
The first day of school is full of so many things: anticipation, wide-eyes, school supplies, new faces, maybe a few butterflies. And I...
This week’s lesson was a super fun one for our little ones! The focus was on God’s promises, so we started by talking about a promise that we had learnt a couple of weeks before. We remember that God had made a promise to Noah to save him and his family from the flood and we saw […]
Introduce the Jewish holiday of Tu B'Shevat with this short and sweet 15 Minute Tu B'Shevat Lesson Plan that kids will enjoy in the classroom or at home.
DAREBEE, darebee, fitness, workouts, visual workouts, fitness challenges, fitness motivation, exercise tips, fitness guides, fitness community
Hillel taught: what is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor ; this is the whole Torah and the rest is just commentary. As ho...
Learn the days of creation with a FUN 7 days of Creation BINGO for your sunday school lesson on the creation story for kids.
A teaching blog full of tips and resources for your classroom.
There are so many things about Sukkot that make it an incredibly fun holiday—spending time outside with friends, shaking the lulav and etrog, and of course, building and decorating a sukkah.
We have started using a new history curriculum this year, Mystery of History. I have struggled for the last several years on a history program that we like and that is a good fit
These Shabbat Sensroy Cards are the perfect calm and fun Shabbat toddler activity! Even my big kids enjoyed feeling the different textures and making rubbings. Use this Shabbat Sensory Cards activity while you are making Shabbat dinner Friday afternoon or for a lovely Shabbat afternoon activity on Saturday. Or really, anytime you want to bring the …
Discover how to create stunning bubble art with your kids! Our step-by-step guide to bubble painting makes this fun and easy activity perfect for young artists. Learn the best tips, tricks, and
Slow down and get crafty
One of the cutest back to school coloring pages you can find! Print to document the new school year and create a darling keepsake.
Trying to talk about Israel to children who are only vaguely aware of their own country (or even the concept of what a country might be) is always going to be a bit hit and miss, but that’s n…
These kindergarten anchor charts will give you the tools you need to teach math, reading, friendship skills, and much more!
Print this list and keep it handy for a month of mitzvot.