NP E Election 2004 20 Remember When 22 Middle School Alternative Hillel will accept sixth-grade students from public schools. Passing between classes are Hillel students Brooke Selik, 12, of Bloomfield Hills, Rebecka Medina, 12, of Southfield, Meghan Plotnick, 12, of Windsor and Liz Traison, 13, of West Bloomfield. DIANA LIEBERMAN StaffMiter P ublic school students enter- ing sixth grade next year will have the option of attending Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit instead. Under "lateral entry," new students will likely be placed in separate Hebrew classes, but will otherwise be integrated into the general Hillel cur- riculum, said Steve Freedman, Hillel head of school. Hillel serves students from kinder- garten through eighth grade. It is part of the Solomon Schechter Day School Association, affiliated with the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism. Freedman, who came to Hillel last summer, said the Farmington Hills school is "committed to a Jewish day school education and wants to offer Jewish teens who have not previously attended our school the benefit of a Hillel education." In the past, students were strongly encouraged to enter Hillel by second grade because of the school's rigorous Judaic studies component. We want to open our doors so more Jewish students can benefit from our special community," Freedman said. During the 2002-2003 school year, Hillel cut expenses $600,000 from the preceding year. Enrollment has dropped from about 720 students last year to 656 this year. However, Freedman said, the deci- sion to begin the sixth-grade entry program is not about increasing school enrollment — because I don't know how large the school should be." "It's not going to be a money-mak- ing program, especially next year," he said. "Basically, it doesn't have to gen- erate a profit, but it can't generate a loss either." Last year, Hillel awarded about $1.4 million in tuition assistance. Although no new scholarship money will be set aside for the students accepted into the lateral entry program, families may apply for existing scholarship funds, Freedman said. Day School Choice The Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit (JAMD), a day high school, has had great success in integrating students from public schools into the general school population, and this has encouraged Freedman in his efforts to widen the student body at Hillel. Freedman called sixth grade, when public schools move students from elementary to middle school, "a natu- ral access point." "If someone is going to make a decision to enter Hillel in sixth grade, either they are thinking of JAMD or are going to be thinking of JAMD," he said. "We envision that most [of the new students] will be in transitional Hebre-w [classes]," he said. "Obviously, it will be a case-by-case decision." Aside from Hillel, the only other non-Orthodox Jewish day elementary school in the Detroit metropolitan area is the 95-student Hebrew Day School of Ann Arbor (HDS), a Solomon Schechter school for chil- dren in kindergarten through fifth grade. Beginning in first grade, the school's Hebrew classes are entirely conducted in Hebrew, said HDS principal Dina Shtull Leber. "For this reason, we encourage families, if they are going to transfer in to the school, to come in by second grade," she said. Most students who graduate from HDS continue their education in public or private schools in the Ann Arbor area, Shtull Leber said. A few attend Hillel beginning in sixth grade. "We already have multiple group- ings within each grade," Freedman said. "For instance, I think we have six sections of math in eighth grade alone. Hillel's new lateral entry program helps serve the greatest range of Jewish children, Freedman said. "In the ideal world," he said, "every kid who wants a Jewish education should be able to have one." ❑ A meeting for parents of fourth- and fifth-grade students interested in Hillel's lateral entry program will be held 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 21, at Hillel, 32200 Middlebelt Road, Farmington Hills. For information, contact Helene Brody, (248) 539 - 1483 or hbrody@hillelday.org \;1k$: ;4, A •A ksA sk,N ANMak, \;\ 1/16 2004 17