Using teshuvah, tefillah , and tzedakah, as a framework, find three opportunities throughout the Days of Awe to reflect on repair with youth.
This game is inspired by The New York Times’ new game, Connections. Each grid contains 16 words. The challenge is to divide those words into the correct 4 sets of 4 words each. Best for ages 10 and up.
How might Jews in the U.S. celebrate Sigd while honoring the history and culture of the Beta Israel community?
Add cute comic drawings in your lesson plans with Torah Comics!
Hebrew at the Center provides DIY Sukkah art activity to help students learn to describe colors and shapes when explaining how they built their sukkah.
Rabbi Dr. Laura Novak Winer, a Reform Jewish Educator, shares powerful stories from her recent trip to Israel with The Jewish Education Project.
A Haggadah supplement from the Hartman Institute for Passover 2024
This guide is meant to educate youth professionals about a wide-range of topics, including LGBTQ, autism, and physical disabilities.
Students will not only look at forms of popular media as a mirror, reflecting (or even distorting) our image, but also in the way that it plays a role in how and why our identity is shaped.
This curriculum explores alternative Jewish theologies that interpret Jewish text and tradition in non-traditional ways.