How I Met Your Middot: Jewish Virtues in American Pop Culture

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Curriculum

This curriculum presents eight teen-relevant middot through the lens of American popular culture. On a first level, this enables pop-culture-saturated learners to access the middot. But more than that, using pop culture shows learners the implicit Jewish content present in their overwhelmingly secular-looking world. A TV show character doesn’t have to be Jewish to display an act of courage, but through this curriculum learners will acquire the ability to recognize that character’s action on a deeper level, as an act of ometz lev.

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Topic
  • Arts and Culture
  • Jewish Peoplehood
  • Jewish Futures
Setting
  • Camp
  • Congregational Learning
  • Teen Engagement

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Tikun Olam J Life

One of the successes of J-Life is that it continues to build community among parents. Most of the learners who started in kindergarten have stayed to continue going on to the upper grades. Parents express that they have a lot of fun participating in J-Life and that they enjoy coming to these experiences.

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Path going far into distance

This Curriculum Guide brings 5th grade families on a journey to discover the middot, the Jewish virtues.

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Shabbat Centered Model: Gesher

Peninsula Temple Beth El (PTBE), San Mateo, CA. Families in small groups with similar age kids begin learning together, move into separate groups for parallel study and then come back together for a family activity followed by participation in Shabbat worship.

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