The Jewish Chronicle

Don’t forget the brighter moments

- BY RABBI DAVID MEYER Rabbi Meyer is chief executive of PaJeS

As the vaccinatio­n process rolls out across the country, we hope that we are beginning to see light at the end of this dark tunnel. There will no doubt be more bumps on the road ahead. However, it is perhaps time for us to begin looking ahead with aspiration­s and plans for life after Covid.

It will not be easy and, as recent JPR research has shown, the financial challenges for schools look immense. However, we hope that as schools reopen, parents will once again support them as they prioritise Jewish education.

During the darkest times of this pandemic, we have seen some exceptiona­l moments of brightness as teachers from across the country have used innovative methods to educate and enthuse their students. Not all of these methods have worked and there have been times when everyone has felt frustrated at the lack of face to face teaching.

However, there have also been times when the use of remote technology has engaged our children and enabled collaborat­ion between schools in ways not seen before.

Whether it is early years children sharing videos of the weekly parashah, grandparen­ts around the world being able to watch their grandchild­ren’s school play, or the Unite with Light event that brought thousands of children together to celebrate Chanukah —there have been some incredible educationa­l moments and we now need to build on these and ensure they become the foundation stones for our future.

We must consider the balance between knowledge-based, skillbased and motivation­al learning.

Each of these plays a critical part in the developmen­t of our children. However, as we are now demonstrat­ing, they can be delivered in a variety of ways.

It cannot be an all-or-nothing approach and the importance of the teacher delivering face-to-face education cannot be understate­d. However, we need to expand our portfolio of pedagogic tools and ensure the best balance of these methodolog­ies in order to engage and enthuse children, no matter what their preferred learning style.

Ideas such as university-style lectures from subject specialist­s, streaming to multiple classes facilitate­d by teachers in the classroom, could enable a huge leap in the educationa­l prospects of larger groups of students.

Talk to any teacher and you will hear a plethora of ideas about utilising the tools and pedagogic techniques they have developed over the past year. Perhaps one of the most interestin­g and challengin­g aspects of lockdown has been the role of parents in the education of their children. As frustratin­g as it may have been to have children marooned at home, we have certainly seen the pendulum shift to see every aspect of education delivered at home and it has reminded us of the critical role that parents play.

There is good foundation for the biblical imperative to teach one’s children, as the parent–child bond is strengthen­ed immeasurab­ly through shared learning. These moments can become lifelong lessons that the child will cherish and reflect on as they grow to adulthood and, in turn, as parents take a lead in educating their own children.

It is time to reestablis­h and protect the educationa­l partnershi­p of parent/teacher/child.

We must ensure that the next chapter is an exciting one and one that will envision and incentivis­e school leaders.

PaJeS has started the conversati­on and will continue to work with schools and other partners to try to learn from the past and build on the best of the innovation to create an ever more relevant and effective educationa­l provision for our students.

It is time to begin looking ahead with plans for life after Covid’

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