F enters its second year of family education. LESLEY PEARL THE DETRO IT J EWISH NEWS STAFF WRITER 14 ancy Vardy is in a bit of a conundrum. She is trying to determine the best way to begin classes for her fourth- through eighth- grades. A simple hello will not suffice. Ms. Vardy is the education and youth director for Congregation B'nai Moshe, specifically its LIFE (Learning Is a Family Experience) program. September will signify the pro- gram's second year, along with an expand- ed curriculum. In LIFE's first year, grades K-three were served. Keeping with a focus that brings families into the synagogue and that provides children with a fun, positive education, Ms. Vardy began sessions last year with 20 minutes of song, announce- ments and the opportu- nity for each child to Lynn and Morgan Rose sing during a Sunday workshop. recall "good things that happened during the class, students file into the felt more leeway to imple- week." sanctuary to lead conclud- ment a new approach to Unlike most religious ing Shabbat services songs learning. school programs which and answer questions posed Because writing is not meet on Sundays, LIFE is by Rabbi Elliot Pachter. allowed on Shabbat, Ms. held on Saturdays. "They feel really comfort- Vardy is forced to be espe- "Shabbat is the tradition- able on the bimah, like this cially creative in planning al day of gathering and is their synagogue, too. And lessons. Students act out study," Ms. Vardy said. it is," Ms. Vardy said. various stories in the Torah, "While the kids are in class, In addition to Saturday use their bodies to create the parents are in services." programming, grades three, aleph-bet letters, discuss The program is modeled five, six and seven will meet preparation for holidays, on a plan developed by a on Wednesdays. Grades enjoy snacks while practic- rabbi in St. Louis. B'nai four and seven also will ing brachot (blessings), and Moshe had no school of its attend on Mondays. Grade sing Hebrew songs and own — it is a former United seven learns twice during English songs with Jewish Hebrew Schools branch — the week, forgoing Saturday content. so the education committee programming to attend peer The last 20 minutes of b'nai mitzvah. Workshops, focusing on a specific theme like tzedakah, are required for grades K-five, five times each year. Grades six through eight attend Sunday workshops once a month. In addition, eighth-graders attend school Monday evenings at the Community Jewish High School at Adat Shalom. Parents also attend workshops. They are learning about the same topic with Rabbi Pachter while their children work with Ms. Vardy and the other teachers. The groups break at mid- morning, share a bagel breakfast and learn together for the remain- ing time. Two Friday-night fami- ly dinners and services, two family retreats at Camp Maas in Ortonville, one youth retreat for grades three through eight and one synagogue sleepover for grades two through five also are included in the program. Attendance is not optional. "It's really important for kids to see Judaism prac- ticed all the time as an intrinsic part of their life, and not drudgery. I try to hire the most dynamic teachers I can — individu- als the kids can relate to," Ms. Vardy said. She stressed it's not just fun and games, though. Torah portions are read and discussed. Aleph-bet is learned through Hebrew "Simon Says" and simple addition of numbers. N ( N N \