ES 28 Friday, November 15, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Bea Kreichman, principal at UHS' Adat Shalom branch, gives Bradley Stolar a helping hand. "Kids and parents saw their bar mitzvah as the end of their Jewish education." Dr. Feinberg Dr. Paul Feinberg Joseph Poisson congregational teachers do not pos- sess JESNA certificates or licenses, most of them are licensed by the public school systems — which maintain a rather open-ended standard, according to education sources.) Rabbi Teller credits the central control of UHS for the higher caliber of its staff. "Detroit and Minneapolis are the only cities that do it this way," explains Teller. "But cen- trality allows us to maintain control over the curriculum. We can demand more of our teachers, and demand that they be better trained, and of course we have central funding." Federation sources are now prepar- ing to extend their funding and therefore influence into the indepen- dent sphere by financing special projects to upgrade synagogue schools. The prospect is held out that nearly all of Detroit's religious school teachers will be licensed or certified. That would place Detroit ahead of all other communities in the nation in terms of credentials. Naturally, what teachers do with their credentials is not measured in hours of credit, as much as years of experience. UHS efforts are welcomed by many in the independent schools. Joseph Poisson, director of education of Temple Israel's school, the largest in Detroit with 1,500 students enrolled in four branches, admitted, The Federation believes a national (JESNA) certificate is a must. And I agree. So we are prepared to cooper- ate." But Poisson is unwilling to speculate whether UHS schools are qualitatively any better than inde- pendents — certification or not. You can't make a blanket state- ment. They have several schools, and their quality varies on a case- by-case basis." Rabbi Teller, however, is con- vinced that community-controlled schools are the right idea, if for no other reason than their insulated structure. "Independent schools must be responsible to the needs and feel- ings of parents," explained Rabbi Teller. Of course, we are also. But a curriculum, for example, cannot be changed because one parent may ob- ject. To change a curriculum re- quires review by a curriculum com- mittee on which are represented teachers, parents and community personalities." Poisson responds, "Parental poli- tics is parental politics. We have it. They have it." Politics or not, no one denies that Federation control does elimi- nate the "funding headache," as Mrs. Kreichman phrased it. According to Rabbi Teller, of the $20 million plus local Campaign budget, about $900,000 funds UHS schools. But to this must be added another $1 mil- lion appropriated for the Jewish Community Center pre-school and about $650,000 for day schools and other educational activities. That amounts to about ten cents out of every local campaign dollar to pro- mote Jewish education. While Detroit's central funding has produced a highly professional minority waiting to extend its influ- ence, other cities are just starting. For example, Baltimore's teachers are encouraged to enroll tuition-free in accredited courses at Baltimore Hebrew College. A $150 stipend is awarded for each course passed with a B or better. Additional cash bonuses and salary supplements are earned at various levels of certifica- tion. (Various levels of certification ultimately lead to a fully-licensed teacher under guidelines of the Na- tional Board of Licensing and Cer- tification.) Other communities are waiting to see how Baltimore's program works before embarking on a similar effort. Nonetheless JESNA recently studied Baltimore's programs and gave them wholehearted support. "The fact is, they're nifty," says David Resnick, JESNA's acting executive vice president. "There is nothing wrong with paying teachers to take additional training. Private business spends hundreds of millions of dollars each year, including pay- ments to employees, to take in- service training. Why shouldn't Jewish education do the same for its teachers?" Even still, the question of cash bonuses is sufficiently touchy that some top Baltimore education