
An introduction to research on how children understand Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The images of these posters can be used with any age learner and with families.

Clips about sites and places in Israel and the diversity of communities. A few examples from the playlist are: Daliyat El-Carmel and the Druze Village | Haifa and the Bahai Temple

A set of interactive games and learning units from Jewish Interactive.

Topics include Geography, Tanakh, history, politics, and culture. These are all “low-tech,” and require no special equipment, except for a printer, paper, and scissors. Suggestions for integrating technology as well as strategies for extending the learning are accompanied with each game, along with

This article can be used as a discussion-starter to talk about Israeli innovation and Israel as a Start-Up Nation, as well as a country that often jumps in first to help out others in times of emergency (see https://tomglobal.org for more information).

Using role plays and text study, this lesson explores the limits of freedom on different levels.

Judaism celebrates diversity of opinion and disagreement, but how we disagree with one another matters.

Known as the “Holy Land” and as the “Promised Land” Israel is at once ancient and modern, spiritual and vibrant. Your visit to Israel will include stops in historic Jerusalem, cosmopolitan Tel Aviv, the mountain fortress of Masada, Crusader castles from the Middle Ages, the lowest point on Earth-the

SpaceIL’s collective vision is to create a new “Apollo Effect”—or rather, the "Beresheet Effect."