Abraham Joshua Heschel School

Abraham Joshua Heschel School

School entrance at 270 West 89th Street
Location
New York City
United States
Information
School type Private
Religious affiliation(s) Jewish
Founded 1983 (high school in 2001)
Founder Peter Geffen
Superintendent/
Principal Administrator
Ariela Dubler
Team name Heschel Heat
Lower School Location 30 West End Avenue, New York, New York 10023
Middle School Location 30 West End Avenue, New York, New York 10023
High School Location 20 West End Avenue, New York, New York 10023
Website http://www.heschel.org/

The Abraham Joshua Heschel School (AJHS) is a pluralistic Nursery to 12 Jewish day school in New York City. It holds two central values, pluralism and egalitarianism. Located in Manhattan, the school seeks to follow the example of its namesake, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.

Other "Heschel Schools" are located in Los Angeles, California and Toronto, Canada. Despite having similar names, the three schools are otherwise unrelated.

School

The Abraham Joshua Heschel School was originally housed in three buildings: The Early Childhood (kindergarten and pre-school) Center and lower school was located on West 89th Street, the middle school on West 91st Street, and a newer high school on 60th Street (opened in 2001). In the summer of 2009, it was announced that construction would begin on a new building at 61st Street and West End Avenue, adjacent to the high school building, which would house the Early Childhood, lower school, and middle school divisions. The planned new facility was referred to as the "One Campus Plan," and construction began in 2009. The new facility would include space to expand the number of classes in Kindergarten through 8th grade, and the school began running extra classes starting with the class entering kindergarten in the 2010-2011 school year.

The new facility, officially known as the Ronald P. Stanton Campus, opened on time for the 2012-2013 school year, on schedule and under budget.

On December 18, 2013, the school announced that Columbia Law School Professor Ariela Dubler would take the helm as Head of School in 2014 when longtime Head of School Roanna Shorofsky retires.[1]

In early 2015, Heschel High School head Ahuva Halberstam announced that she would be leaving her post at the end of the academic year to help found another Jewish school. She was replaced by Rabbi Noam Silverman, formerly the Principal of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at Gideon Hausner Jewish Day School in Palo Alto, California.

Student life

Students of the Heschel High School commute from all boroughs of New York City, as well as from the New York metropolitan area, including New Jersey, Connecticut and Westchester. Additionally, students' countries of origin have included Switzerland, Ukraine, Russia, Argentina, Venezuela, Austria, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates and Israel.

All students at the Heschel School study Jewish topics (Tanakh, Talmud, and Hebrew) as well as secular ones throughout the day.

Relations between the student body and the high school administration are handled in part by the student government, known as the SGA (Student Government Association). The SGA also works with the faculty and outside groups to arrange activities for the students, and in particular plays a major role in planning the annual Shabbaton weekend trip, as well as the annual color war games.

Clubs

Clubs constitute a large part of the social life at The Heschel High School. Most clubs are supervised by a faculty member. Some clubs, such as College Bowl and Art Appreciation, are completely student supervised.

List of clubs

Also included in the clubs category are committees that exist within the High School. Such committees include Student Government. These groups are not open to participants, but rather representatives are elected by the Student Body.

School newspaper

Heschel Helios
Heschel High School
"We stand for what we utter."
Website http://helios.heschel.org

The Heschel Helios is the official student produced newspaper of the Heschel High School. The namesake of the newspaper follows with the high school's heat theme (the sports team is the Heschel Heat). Helios is Greek for "sun". The student club aims to produce four issues per school year. The club goes through a complete traditional newspaper experience. The process includes "slugging" articles, writing the articles, producing images or graphics for feature articles, peer editing of editorials and articles and finally, layout and printing, the involved students get a full experience of how a newspaper operates. The newspaper's motto, "We stand for what we utter," was chosen in the Winter of 2005 and is an original quote from the school's namesake, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.

Technological integration

The High School is a "laptop school." All students are required to obtain a laptop to use as a learning tool throughout their education. Teachers are equipped with laptops, and all classrooms contain smartboards.

Sports

The Heschel Heat is the name carried by the various sports teams that play for the High School. The teams include boys and girls basketball, girls volleyball, tennis, baseball, soccer, floor hockey, track and field, and ultimate frisbee.

The Heschel Heat boys junior varsity 2008-09 basketball team won the school's first Yeshiva League basketball championship.

In nonathletic areas, Heschel has clubs for debate, Model United Nations, mock trial, and Junior State of America. The school also has a college bowl team, known as the Heschel Velociraptors, and a mathematics team. The Velociraptors have been extremely successful, leading the New York City division within the Yeshiva League and representing it in the championships in the 2012-13 and 2014-15 seasons.

See also

References

External links

Coordinates: 40°46′20″N 73°59′23″W / 40.772257°N 73.989778°W / 40.772257; -73.989778

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.