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\ " 8/ \
Harry Solomon
/ /
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ffnai David's new religious school provides an inside look at the day-to-day learning
experience. Fourth-grader David Soloman answers his teachers' questions.
A Head Count
For Students
" , \
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Open Mon.-Tues.-Wed. 9:30 - 5:45, Thurs. 9:30 - 8:00, Fri.-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Enrollment grows at most area
congregational schools.
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248-626-9810
ALL SALES FINAL • SALE DOES NOT APPLY TO PRIOR PURCHASES OR SPECIAL ORDERS • PERMIT #132
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10/9
1998
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20 Detroit Jewish News
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DETROIT
JEWISH IfEWS
N
JULIE WIENER
Staff Writer
A
-
lthough students will con-
tinue trickling in through-
out the High Holiday sea-
son, preliminary enroll-
ment figures are available for
Detroit's synagogue schools. And for
the most part, they're larger than last
year.
There are exceptions, such as
Temple Emanu-El, Beth Abraham
Hillel Moses and the Jewish Parents
Institute, but most schools are report-
ing increased enrollment this year as
well as over the past five years.
Small, young schools and those
with new facilities are seeing the most
dramatic changes. Many synagogues
are reporting increased enrollment
among teenagers and children in
kindergarten through second grade.
It is difficult to determine the
impact of last year's flurry of person-
nel changes, in which four syna-
gogues lost their education director
or did not renew his or her contract.
B'nai Moshe has continued to grow
and Temple Beth El reports it has
maintained steady enrollment this
year despite the changes (although it
would not provide specific numbers).
However, Beth Abraham Hillel Moses
has lost students and Temple Kol
Ami, which is still searching for an
education director, did not return
phone calls.
Enrollment trends may reflect
overall population growth rather than
increased interest in Jewish educa-
tion. The number of school-aged
children in many metro Detroit
school districts is rising, with enroll-
ment up in the Berkley, Birmingham,
Farmington, Novi, Walled Lake and
West Bloomfield school districts.
B'nai Moshe in West Bloomfield,
which opened its school five years
ago and introduced a high school
program this fall, more than quadru-
pled from 30 students in its first year
Or
•