P hotos by Mars ha Su ndq u ist Teacher Sarah Eisenberger with Naga Krakauer, 6 (left), and Shiva Hurvitz. ing with students. If a child is sick more than two days, the teacher calls to see about him or her. Once when we closed the school because of snow, a teacher called each of her students and said, 'Let's learn for a few minutes.' And that's typical. No one thought it was strange." Accredited by the state, Darchei Torah has both Jewish and gentile teachers. Most of the Jewish studies teachers moved here One of the school's most controversial policies is a stipulation that Darchei Torah students may not watch television. Mrs. Kahn believes this approach promotes healthier, smarter, more creative children. from out of town; all secular-studies teachers must be certified. Seventeen teachers work at the yeshiva. Mrs. Kahn interviews each candidate, and "I look for quality." She discusses the school's philosophies at length with each potential teacher and requires the applicant to perform a model lesson as part of the interview process. One message that all teachers must stress: creativity. "We are very, very big on creative writing," Mrs. Kahn said. Few things ir- ritate the principal more than "when all projects come out the same." An example of the school's creative pro- gram is a collection of second-grade stories featuring "Mrs. Piggle Wiggle," a fictional character in a children's book series. The children's stories are all moral tales of how boys and girls with bad habits learn impor- tant lessons with the aid of Mrs. Piggle Wiggle. In the Darchei Torah collection, the friendly old woman helps stop a pencil thief, cures a girl who giggles too much and offers a magic powder to cure the terrible table manners of "bad-mannered Boysa." Some critics complain that the school's dedication to Hebrew, Torah and Jewish studies comes at the expense of its English and secular program. Darchei Torah students study English 11 hours a week, compared to about half a day each school day at both Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and Akiva. Assuring that the secular studies program continues and improves at the same rate as the Jewish studies "will be Darchei Torah's biggest challenge," said parent Miriam Ho- jda. "Still, I'm very, very satisfied with what they're doing. My son, who is in the second grade, reads at a second-grade level — and I want him to maintain a level comparable to students in his class." Equally important is that her son, Menachem, is motivated to learn at Darchei Torah, Mrs. Hojda said. And if his secular studies fall short of those offered at public schools, "I knew that was a compromise I was making" when she opted to send him to a Jewish day school. No Israeli flags can be found at the front of the room, and Mrs. Kahn declines to discuss the school's position on the State of Israel, saying, "we don't get involved in politics." Students do know that "Eretz Yisrael (the land of Israel) is a special land that God gave us, and that Jews always wished and hoped to go to Eretz Yisrael," she said. Dur- ing these days of the United States' war with Iraq, students often include Israel in their prayers. Darchei Torah's approach toward Israel is not unlike that of Yeshiva Beth Yehudah; Akiva is the only local day school that calls itself Zionist. But Darchei Torah parents themselves generally do not take a position on Zionism, so the school's stance is not an issue, they say. "One of the most important things about Darchei Torah is that my children love go- ing," said Bonnie Lax, who has two daughters at the school. "And I like the importance placed on midot. One recent project stressed that the children treat everybody — Jew and gentile — with respect," she said. "To me, that's what being Jewish is about." 0 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29