4th Grade: Sukkot – and Ha’azinu, on the wings of eagles

Happy Sukkot, 4th Grade families! For those who are curious about what’s up with the beautiful treehouse-on-the-ground looking thing outside our synagogue, that’s a sukkah. Welcome in! The plural of sukkah is sukkot, which is where the holiday gets its name. It’s our major harvest/Thanksgiving festival.
The various 4th Grade classes did slightly different Sukkot activities, but all were delightful. Sarah’s classes talked about the idea that Sukkot is a time for happiness and what it means for God (or someone) to tell us that we need to be happy right now. We had great discussions about feelings on command and the idea that there are things and people around us who contribute to the way that we feel. Then we discussed the rules of building a sukkah and created 3D fantasy paper sukkot, which would contribute to happiness — because, turns out, there isn’t any rule that says you CAN’T have a baseball-themed sukkah, or ones with whimsical beds and couches, or ones with campfires and chocolate fountains, or waterslides and pools…!  They were having such a great creative time with it that Morah Leora continued those projects, too.
Parsha: Abby’s class talked about Ha’azinu as a pep-talk — or a prep talk — from Moses to the People of Israel, and designed their own pep-talks, too. Morah Leora’s classes explored some of the poetry in Ha’azinu, creating spiral-shaped mobiles to depict the way that eagles teach their baby eaglets to fly, carrying them upon their wings in ever-ascending circles (to which Moses likened God carrying the people of Israel). The ascending spirals can also depict cyclical time in Judaism (whether repeated reading of Torah, or holidays every year). Each year, we read the same Torah portion again, or have the same holiday, but, we’re older and wiser than last time — we’re higher up, we can see more, as though an eagle is circling us upwards. The words haven’t changed, but we have.
Lauren Hart’s classes made their own candy sukkah (which I’m sure you saw when they brought them home). She writes: “I apologize for the sugar high they made have had, but we had a blast! We also spoke about what sukkot is and why some people live in their sukkah during this festive week. We’ll be starting with creation next week, and I’m super excited to dive into Bereshet!”

All of our 4th Grade classes got to visit our beautiful Sukkah on Tuesday or Wednesday, where everyone who wished got to smell the lovely etrog and shake the lulav in all directions.


Discussion questions:

– Ha’azinu – For poetry and imagination: Try watching point-of-view videos together of eagles flying. (For example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0wCikzaUhA .) What would that be like?  If you were in the desert, watching eagles flying like that, and listening to Moses’s song — how would that feel, to imagine that God was taking care of you, and flying you around?
– Ha’azinu – For growth and change: What transitions have you and your child faced in life?  What skills and support helped you or your child get through the transition, to become wiser or stronger on the other side?
– Sukkot – For creativity and happiness: Ask your child all about their dream sukkah. What would it be made of? What shape would it be, what furnishings would it have?  These tend to get terrifically creative!
– Sukkot – For world awareness: There is a great tradition of welcoming guests into our sukkah to share our harvest foods.  This can be an opportunity for you to talk together about inclusion and immigration – which could be your politics, and/or your own familial immigration stories.

In Hebrew Through Movement, 4th grade has been working on verbs, including ‘to pick up’ and ‘to put down’, plus reviews of  to stand, to sit, to walk, to stop, to run, to jump, to spin, to point. Nouns: apple, candle/s, honey, lulav. Additionally they were introduced to the preposition ‘under’, and words like everyone, team (A/B/C), Door, table, chair, teacher, counselor, board, window, head, hand\s, leg\s, book, pencil. Additionally they were introduced to the adverbs slow, fast, in place, and connecting words: to, no\yes, and ‘and’.

7th Grade Gets Cookin’!

Hope you all had a meaningful High Holiday season! The last two weeks have been really exciting for 7th graders, now that we have officially launched our electives. This past week, our students were learning how to make Israeli hummus, how to knit (and how knitting shows up in Torah), how Judaism connects to the ethics of sports, how there’s more to the story of Judah than meets the eye, how the Holocaust has affected their classmates’ families, and how to engage in Rosh Chodesh girls’ discussion groups.

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2nd Grade: L’dor V’dor, the Stories of Our Ancenstors

Jewish Studies

Tuesdays/Wednesdays Jewish Studies with Haley

We missed our students on Tuesday when Yachad was closed for Rosh Hashanah, but hope you hear about what we are working on and are excited to learn when we return together in a couple weeks. On Wednesday, students learned all about the stories and traditions that make us Jewish. We learned the Jewish value of L’dor V’dor or from generation to generation and how as Jews we have a long tradition of passing stories and ritual objects through generations. We read the story The Keeping Quilt and learned how one family made a quilt to remember their ancestors and passed it down to their children to tell the story of their family. Then, we each made our own quilt squares with drawings of traditions in their family and objects that make us feel Jewish. Soon, we will have a quilt made up of all our 2nd grade traditions.

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Diving into Creation of the World

Students continued exploring the connection between Rosh Hashanah and Genesis/Bereshit through diving into the creation of the world. Through their own stories of beginnings, hearing a story about how Rosh Hashanah is the birthday of the world and activities to reflect on how birthdays are celebrated, students deepened their understanding of Rosh Hashanah and continued bonding as a class. In Hebrew students played with the words יום הולדת, להוריד,  להרים  , שנה טובה (good year, to raise, to lower, birthday).

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The First Day & Night: Rosh Hashanah & Havdallah

Students explored a story about the first Shabbat and the first night and found similarities between Rosh Hashanah and Havdallah (the ritual ceremony that marks the transition of Shabbat to the rest of the week). Through listening to the story, playing a game and reflecting on the comparisons students came away with ideas about how we enter into new beginnings and transitions. In Hebrew through Movement students played with the words challah, kita and shofar.

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4th Grade – Nitzavim: You can do it!

As we near the end of the Torah, and the end of Moses’s life, Nitzavim has Moses’s big “You can do it!” speech to the People of Israel.  In this portion, Moses reassures us that keeping our promises to God isn’t too baffling or complicated for us to succeed at it. We don’t have to climb up mountains to make good choices in the heavens. We don’t have to swim across the sea to make good choices, either.  Nope! Our good choices are already very close to us, they’re already in our mouths and our hearts.

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7th Grade Rolls Out Tikkun Olam-A-Themes!

This week, in their last “regular” Jewish Studies class for awhile, the 7th graders prepped for the high holidays by discussing one of the most challenging texts read during the days of awe: the binding of Isaac. The students acted out the scene and then worked in chevruta (pairs) to analyze the original text before engaging in a classwide debate about whether Abraham passed God’s test.

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Rosh Hashana Resolutions

This week in 5th grade, we spent some time reflecting on our year through the lense of Mitzvot(commandments). Students thought about some of the mitzvot they’ve done really well this past year, and they chose a which mitzvot they want to focus on in the new year. Some popular choices for the new year included “Keeping Peace in the Home(Shalom Bayit)” and “Help Repair the World(Tikkun Olam).” We encourage you to ask your students which mitzvot they have chosen to work on in the new year.

 

Announcements

In this section you will find info on:

  1. Upcoming Closures
  2. High Holidays Services & Yachad Programming
  3. High Holidays, Ushers Needed
  4. 4th-7th Grade Yachad Retreat to Camp Eisner- Oct 25-26!

 

  1. Upcoming Yachad Closures: 

9/30-10/1 Closed for Rosh Hashanah

10/8-10/9 Closed for Yom Kippur

10/14 Closed for Sukkot I and Indigneous Peoples’ Day/Columbus Day

 

  1. High Holiday Services & Activities

We are excited for several services for Yachad students and families and activities on Monday Sept 30!

Below is info about Rosh Hashanah services. Following the K-2 and 3-6 grade services, we will have snacks, stories, crafts, and a song session in the rotunda!

Stay tuned for info on Yom Kippur services and programming! 

K-2 Family Service, 9:30

Led by Rabbi Epstein, Director of Yachad and Family Engagement Tehilah Eisenstadt, and Songleader Debbie Brukman, these services offer interactive and music-based activities, prayers, and stories for children in grades K-2 and their parents.

Grades 3-6 Family Service, 10:00

Led by Rabbi Epstein, these services are designed for children in grades 3-6 and meet the spiritual needs of parents and youth alike.

 

Rosh Hashanah Inclusive Youth Experience, 3:00

Free & Open to the Public

Stories, singing, apples & honey

Designed for neurodiverse young people: no loud noises, soft lighting, fidgets and noise cancelling headphones available. 

 

  1. High Holy Day Services – Ushers and Greeters Needed

Please help welcome fellow families in the Yachad and ECC programs at our Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services by volunteering to usher at our Family and Tots services. Parents, please sign up and your older children can help out too!  Click here to Register Now!

 

  1. Save the Date, 4th Annual 4th-7th Grade Yachad Retreat!

We are thrilled to open registration for our 4th Annual Yachad Retreat for 4th – 7th Grade, Friday, October 25 – Sunday, October 27, 2019! On this student only weekend, 4th-7th graders will have the chance to make new friends, strengthen existing friendships, celebrate Shabbat at URJ Eisner Camp, and build community through fun and exciting activities.  There will even be special opportunities for the 7th grade students to lead the group and make this weekend their own.

 

Registration includes round trip bus transportation from CBE, all meals and linens. The bus will leave from CBE on Friday at 3:30 pm and return around 2:00pm on Sunday. 

 

Once registration is under way, watch your inbox for event specific information like a packing list and other important updates.  We are happy to write an excused absence for a religious event if necessary to facilitate arriving to the bus by 3:30. Please contact Haley Breskin at hbreskin@cbebk.org with all questions regarding the retreat.

Mitzvot and Morals

Our first big unit in 5th grade is all about Mitzvot(commandments). We introduced the topic this week with some lively discussions and debates. We posed the question of whether humans are naturally good or bad. A debate on this led students to form opinions on whether we need mitzvot to guide us. We talked about whether or not we believe people had a moral compass guiding them to know right from wrong even before they received the commandments from God. I encourage you to ask your children what their thoughts were on these topics and continue this discussion at home.

We are also starting to work in our small leveled Hebrew groups this week. Most students are using a program called Let’s Learn Hebrew Side by Side. This uses online lessons to teach/review one letter at a time and build reading skills as the year goes on. Students will be going through the lessons in their small groups with a teacher one day a week and doing hands-on activities and games the other day of the week to reinforce the letters and vowels that were learned. The great thing about this program is that if a student misses a class, they can log in at home and do the lesson on their own so they can be caught up to where their group is when they return. This is really important since consistency is key when learning a new language. More updates on this and login info to come soon!

Students who already have experience reading Hebrew will also be working in small groups with teachers and using some Hebrew storybooks to practice their decoding skills, build a bank of sight works and learn new vocabulary.

Seventh Grade: Choice and Changing the World

Hi families!

Our second week of Yachad was terrific. In our first class, we discussed a theme that was perhaps close the hearts of our seventh graders: to what extent do we have a choice to be Jewish? Students looked at passages of Torah and Talmud to evaluate whether Moses had a choice at the burning bush and whether the Jewish people had a choice at Mt. Sinai. During our Tefillah time, students recited the blessing and Abel volunteered to sound the shofar in front of the whole grade (and he did a great job!)

During our second class, we talked about teens around the world who have made a difference, and many of our Yachad students were especially inspired by Greta Thunberg (and some of them even said they are participating in the Climate Strike this Friday!) As I mentioned in last week’s post, all of the seventh graders will be completing a community service project this year (that we are fondly calling Tikkun Olam-A-Thon) as part of the preparation for their B’Nei Mitzvah.

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Interviewing a Rabbi

This week in 5th grade, our students got to interview some of the Rabbis at CBE to learn what being a Jewish leader means to them and see how our Rabbis live the Jewish values we’ve been learning about. The Saturday/Tuesday class interviewed Rabbi Green and the Monday/Wednesday class interviewed Rabbi Epstein.

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Purim Fun

We had SO much fun celebrating Purim at Yachad this week with a fun shpiel(Yiddish for play) put on by our teachers, rice krispie hamantashen, creating groggers/ra’ashanim (noisemaker) to use at the megillah reading, singing Purim songs, face painting, mishloach manot preparations (gifts to others to help increase joy on the holiday) and mask making!

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New Unit: Modern Jewish Leaders

This week in fifth grade we are moving onto our final unit of the year in which we will focus on Jewish leaders in our world today. We’ve started by listing all the Jewish leaders we can think of in our lives and we will continue by learning more about some in particular and even interviewing a few of them in person.

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