Family Education: Lessons from Sesame Street

From Section:
Informal Education
Published:
Apr. 28, 2019
April 28, 2019

Source: eJewish Philanthropy 

 

Once, we educated children; now we educate families. This change in focus holds true in Jewish education as well, as reflected in a recent series about family engagement in eJewish Philanthropy, which highlights the many ways that Jewish education is now understood to be a family endeavor. Whether in day school education, bar mitzvah preparation, or Jewish camp, an educator most effectively reaches the Jewish child by including the parent in that enterprise.

When we use family education as an opportunity to teach on multiple levels, we keep the parents in the room, literally and figuratively, staying engaged in their own Jewish educational process. And Jewish ideas easily address multiple generations – themes of forgiveness, kindness, Jewish identity, and gratitude to God can be expressed to preschoolers, teenagers, and adults alike. In our holiday family service, when teaching about the importance of examining one’s deeds, I include examples from a parent’s life (had a hard day at work and took it out on my kids). When I mention this, I hear laughter of recognition from parents and kids alike. I often introduce a prayer or song with a bit of adult content. It might be quick enough that the children barely notice, but the adults catch it, and I see it has impact. A children’s song can become a scaffold for adult concepts. The kids benefit on their own level, while the adult experience has been enriched.

The best part of offering Jewish education on two levels is that children see their parents engaged in authentic spiritual work. The experience, for the child, moves from a place of “telling me” to “showing me” – kids see their parents practicing what they preach, as parents demonstrate their Jewish values in real time, with their children by their side. Furthermore, when the parents and children are both engaged in the room, then the conversation is more likely to continue outside the room, perhaps on the way home or around the dining room table, creating a bridge between the education of the institution and the education of the home.

Teaching on two levels, in the spirit of Sesame Street or Wow in the World, can be effective in many Jewish educational contexts. In Jewish day schools, when parents are invited to participate in a school activity, the program often focuses on the needs of the child – the parent helps out with a craft project, or parents are invited to sit in the audience at a chagigah performance. In these parent-child settings, can we offer some adult content? In supplemental religious schools, can we send home thought questions to be discussed over the family dinner table, which are universal enough to engage parents together with children? In Jewish camp, can we encourage parents, in their daily email to their child, to answer a Jewish question that the children themselves are addressing at camp learning sessions that week? When I teach a Jewish parenting course, I offer tips for raising a child with Jewish values, but also include content that speaks to the parent in her own Jewish life. When I run a preschool Shabbat program, I weave in grown-up concepts of Shabbat. Whenever I have children and adults together, I try to speak to the adults, even with the kids in the room.

This approach not only enriches the parent’s experience, but it makes it more likely that they will remain lifelong learners in the future. Adult Jewish education programming often attracts empty nesters and retirees for the obvious reasons – they have time to attend a lecture in the evening, without the pull of after-school activities, homework and bedtime; they often have daytime hours available for enriching their Jewish knowledge. In my own synagogue, our adult education offerings tend to attract an older population. We struggle to reach the parents in their 30s, 40s, and 50s, because their lives are so focused on the intensity of child-rearing and busy careers.

Jewish institutions may offer adult classes and programs geared toward parents, and these certainly benefit the parents who take advantage of them, but these offerings become yet another commitment for busy parents to take on. Parents do, however, already make time to be present for their children. Once they have made this commitment to attend a high holiday service, or school performance, or camp visiting day, they are now a captive audience – these are precious opportunities for adult education! Keeping parents engaged in their own Jewish learning makes it more likely that, decades later, when they do have more time on their hands, they will attend those educational lectures.

In the burgeoning field of Jewish Family Education, we often think of a parent as an accessory to her child’s education. Once we have the adults in the room, let’s address them as adult learners on their own terms. If Sesame Street could do it with the ABC’s, we can certainly do it for the Aleph Bet and beyond.

Read the entire article at eJewish Philanthropy

  


Updated: May. 21, 2019
Keywords:
Family education | Supplementary education | Synagogue education | Experiential education