Chicago Sun-Times

Teacher helped children with learning difference­s

- BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL, STAFF REPORTER modonnell@suntimes.com | @suntimesob­its

When kids have trouble concentrat­ing or reading, it’s easy for them to get down about themselves.

Enter Jacqueline Rudman, who specialize­d in helping students with learning difference­s at Francis W. Parker School.

“She believed in everyone. These kids were just as intelligen­t — they just learned differentl­y,” said Allison Kimball, director of the school’s Learning Resource Department ( LRD). “She knew if [ they] were a fantastic artist, or athlete, or actress or musician. She was interested in them beyond the paper she was helping them write.”

Ms. Rudman, who developed the LRD at Parker in 1969 — when learning challenges weren’t widely understood or addressed — died May 7 at home in Rancho Mirage, California, where she moved after retiring from Parker in 1997. She was 86 and had a form of lung cancer, according to her son Keith.

In addition to the students, she educated Parker parents and other faculty members.

“She was a master at putting her students’ parents at ease regarding their child’s learning issues,” said Marilyn Freund, a protege who went on to start a similar program at the Latin School.

“She was excellent at teaching and helping children understand why they learned differentl­y,” said Harriett Cholden, a former fifthgrade teacher at Parker.

Ms. Rudman helped make the LRD a haven for kids who might be struggling.

“She said the Learning Resource room should be right in the mix of things — kids should be coming in and out, so there’s no stigma attached to it,” said Kimball. At the end of every session, “You could go into her jar and take one jelly bean.”

“I can’t tell you how many people have told me, ‘ Your mom changed my life,’ ” said her son.

Like David Lieber.

“She believed in me when I didn’t believe in myself,” he said. Lieber started seeing her when he was in third or fourth grade. Now 42, he’s a Washington, D. C.- based lawyer for Google. “She knew I had challenges in certain areas, and she tried to understand why I thought the way I thought. I think she really challenged me not to accept limitation­s I believed I had.”

“She changed a lot of lives,” said Adam Donahue, whom she helped with dyslexia. “She showed me how to comprehend what I was reading. She got me to where letters made sense. To this day, I still use the tricks she taught me.” Donahue, 49, earned an engineerin­g degree from Northern Illinois University and owns a Missouri- based trucking company.

Young Jackie grew up the daughter of Jack and Ida Goldberg. Her Russian- born father operated a successful plumbing company, according to her son. “A big mark for him was he got accepted into the Standard Club. For a Russian immigrant, that was a big deal,” he said. The Goldbergs also belonged to the Idlewild Country Club in Flossmoor, where other members included Sears leaders Julius Rosenwald and Arthur Loeb.

Her family often hosted other Russian immigrants who were trying to find their footing in America.

She’d earned a bachelor’s degree from Northweste­rn University by the time she married Ken Rudman. They had Keith and two more children, Stacy and Craig. Their kids went to Parker. She became interested in learning issues because Craig didn’t learn in traditiona­l ways, her son said. “She’d drop us off at school, then she’d be in the Northweste­rn library for five hours,” Keith Rudman said. “She did that for five years” to get her master’s degree.

“Northweste­rn was doing all of the breakthrou­gh research on kids” with learning challenges, said Molly Donahue, a former teacher at Parker. “She was the person who developed the whole learning- difference­s program at Parker School. Because of her, there are a whole generation of very successful adults who are successful only because she worked with the kids — and with the teachers — explaining what was going on. She would go to bat for these kids all the way to 12th grade.”

Ken Rudman died in 2001 after almost 50 years of marriage. She met her second husband, Marshall Gelfand, in Rancho Mirage.

She volunteere­d as a docent at the Palm Springs Art Museum. And she always told people: “Read, read, read.”

In addition to her husband and children, Ms. Rudman is survived by her stepchildr­en Todd and Dean and Elizabeth Stearns, five grandchild­ren and three step- grandchild­ren.

Services are planned at 1: 30 p. m. Sunday at Lakeside Congregati­on for Reform Judaism, 1221 County Line Rd., Highland Park. Her family will receive condolence­s until 8 p. m. in the community room.

 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Jackie Rudman was a longtime teacher at Parker School who excelled at helping kids with learning difference­s.
SUPPLIED PHOTO Jackie Rudman was a longtime teacher at Parker School who excelled at helping kids with learning difference­s.

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