Metro • -.; 4 Ni / • 0 " • • 4 4MVi . . 4 Michigan Jewish Institute looks forward to new, larger home. "." Danielle Taubman Joseph Lakier Shelli Liebman Dorfman Senior Writer W hen 18-year-old Danielle Taubman of Farmington Hills begins classes at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor next Tuesday, she will be ahead of the game, starting with two history credits gained through a class she took at the Michigan Jewish Institute (MJI) while still in high school. Among the nearly 2,000 students who have taken courses at the Oak Park- based MJI — some earning associate and bach- elor degrees — are those like Danielle who took classes that can earn both high school and college credit. For the past 13 years, both degree students and guest students have passed through the rented hallways of buildings providing temporary housing for MJI. The Aug. 20 unanimous approval of MJI's amended building site plan by the West Bloomfield Township board will change all that. The amendment was for a facility Building For The Future Rabbi Kasriel Shemtov larger and in a different area of the site than one originally approved in 2002. "We can finally start construction of our own building that will house classrooms, offices, a resource center and more said Rabbi Kasriel Shemtov, president of the school. MJI's home will be built on the Chabad Campus of West Bloomfield between the Friendship Circle's Meer Family Friendship Center and the Jack and Miriam Shenkman Shul-Chabad Lubavitch building. Landry Newman Architecture in Birmingham has already prepared a draw- ing of the building's exterior and an inside layout. According to Paul Levine, MJI's director of marketing and student devel- opment,"Engineering details and design are under development. Construction con- tracts have not yet been awarded." What Is MJI? The school, founded in 1994, was origi- nally funded by the Lubavitch Foundation of Michigan in Oak Park. The independently operated, private institution is a chartered and accredited senior college recognized by the state of Michigan and U.S. Department of Education, with national Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools accreditation and approval of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. "For a number of years, we were focused only on computer information systems and business courses',' Shemtov said. "Now we offer degrees in computer fields and in Judaic studies." MJI's business and computer degree options now include the associate of applied science degree in business and information systems; and bachelor of applied science degrees in computer infor- mation systems. This past school year, a bachelor of applied science degree in Judaic studies with concentrations in Judaic education and in organizational leadership were added to the curriculum. Over all, 95 candidates have received bachelor degrees from MJI. The college also offers a two-year program toward a certificate in talmudic law and jurispru- dence. `And we are just finishing the first year of a pilot program of online courses',' Shemtov said. New courses have been prepared to add to the 19 online courses that have already been offered to degree candidates. MJI classes are offered in the evenings and on Sundays, with a yearlong post- secondary study abroad program earn- ing undergraduate degree credits from schools with MJI articulation agreements. Students with MJI degrees have gone on to professional careers and to graduate studies. "From its inception, MJI graduates who did not choose immediate employ- ment have gone on to earn postgraduate degrees in areas ranging from education, law, social work, technology and medi- cine," Levine said. MJI graduate Joseph Lakier of Oak Park is currently attending Wayne State University Law School in Detroit with a full scholarship as a dean's scholar and Lombard Fellow. "After high school, I spent a year study- ing in Israel and then enrolled at MJI," said Lakier, 21. "The college had just started its cooperative computer program so I applied." Earning a scholarship, he attended MJI, graduating with a bachelor's degree in computer information systems. "MJI customized the program for me, allow- ing me to take a few courses at Oakland Community College and to accelerate some of my classes so I could graduate sooner:' Lakier said. "The smaller classes allowed a student-to-faculty ratio that was sometimes one-to-one Teaching Teens For the past seven years, MJI's Community Guest and High School Dual Enrollment Course program has offered classes to individuals not enrolled in MJI's degree programs. High school students may receive both high school and college credit for any of MJI's classes, including computer courses. However, various levels of Modern Hebrew Language classes, Encountering Building on page 14 iN August 30 • 2007 13