c7--- TTBn Hillel Day School's barbecue for new students: Enrollment has grown by 37 percent in the past decade /--- Steady Growt Enrollment at local day schools is up this year, but not skyrocketing. JULIE WIENER Staff Writer W ith students settling into the new academic year, local day school enroll- ment numbers are in, and they're up slightly. Hillel Day School and Yeshiva Beth Yehudah are boasting the largest increases. Hillel's student body now numbers 712, a 4.5 percent increase from last year's 684 students. At the Yeshiva, total enrollment is 755 this year (with 446 students in the girls' school and 309 in the boys' school), up 3.7 percent from 728 stu- dents in 1996-97. Akiva Hebrew Day School's num- bers remain fairly steady — its 296 students represent a minor increase from last year's 294. Ann Arbor Hebrew Day School interim principal Naomi Blumenberg reports that enrollment — at 86 stu- dents — is on par with last year, but was unable to provide statistics from 1996-97 or previous years. And although Darchei Torah just opened a girls' high school class, the school's overall enrollment has dropped slightly to 274 students, compared to last year's 285. Yeshiva Gedolah's enrollment has also dropped slightly, with 140 students, compared to last year's 145. While this year's fluctuations are in the single digits percentage-wise, all local day schools — with the excep- tion of Akiva — report significant increases over their numbers from a decade ago. Darchei Torah, which was founded in 1986 with only 14 students, has grown to almost 20 times that size. Yeshiva Gedolah's enrollment has almost tripled, up from 50 students in 1987-88. Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and Hillel Day School have also enjoyed large gains: the yeshiva's enrollment has grown by more than 150 percent since 1987-88, when total enrollment was 476. Hillel's student body has grown by 37 percent in the past decade, with 1987-88 enrollment at 519. But growth can be a mixed bless- ing, straining existing facilities and — if tuition assistance is required — stretching school budgets. "Over the past five years we have had three expansions of our facilities, but they have not been able to keep up with our growth," said Rabbi Eli Mayerfeld, executive director of Yeshiva Beth Yehudah. Akiva's enrollment has defied trends of growth or decrease, fluctuating any- where from 250 to 340 over the past decade, said its prin- cipal, Rabbi Karmi Gross. But with other schools grow- ing, why has Akiva's enroll- ment been so erratic? "It depends on what hap- pens each year," said Gross, who blamed part of Akiva's zero growth rate on its suc- cess as a Zionist institution. "Aliyah (immigration to Israel) is an occupational haz- ard," he joked, adding that Akiva lost 10 children this year when several families moved to Israel. However, while Rabbi Gross would like to see Akiva's enrollment grow to 30 students per grade (approxi- mately 360 total), he has no specific recruitment strategies. "Our most serious attempt at increasing enrollment is doing the best we can. Akiva's record speaks for itself: our graduates get in to the best uni- versities and yeshivot," he said. Will the enrollment trends contin- ue in Detroit? Rabbi Dovid Kahn, principal of Darchei Torah's boys' school, antici- pates modest growth in the coming years, but wants to retain the school's small class sizes and focus on personal attention. Hillel hopes to continue growing, but has no specific enrollment goals, said Marianne Bloomberg, director of development. Yeshiva Beth Yehudah anticipates continued increases as well, and is studying ways to expand its facilities to accommodate growth, said Rabbi Mayerfeld. Ann Arbor's Hebrew Day School aims to increase enroll- ment to 125 students over the next few years. Nationally, educators report that day school enrollment has been on the upswing since 1990, and many fear a financial crisis. In response, a newly formed national organization of lay leaders from Jewish day schools of all denominations will be hosting a forum on financing Jewish education later this month.