One of the most important functions of Ieladeinu’s Day Center is to support the children and their families during school education. Since the creation of our Day Center, we achieved that many boys, girls and adolescents (hereinafter, children) resume school, finish their school year, and even escort or bear the national flag.
The school institution has a fundamental role in upbringing. Although we often hear that it is the natural place for the development of a child, there is nothing natural in this encounter: each child has his/her own way to build relationships with the school, teachers and peers. These singularities are determined in multiple manners by the personal history of each child and family, the context where they live and the way in which each responsible adult relates and gets involved with learning and knowledge.
At the same time, each school, director, and teaching team are different. Therefore, it is common that crossed expectations between students and schools translate into integration and learning difficulties that take different forms: children that are restless, with attention deficits, feeling that school is not for them, uninterested, feeling excluded, unwilling to learn, thinking they are not important to their teachers, aggressive…
At the Day Center, we start from trying to understand: What type of difficulty are we talking about? Is it evolutional, cognitive, physiological, social, etc.? But, most of all, we work with the conviction that we can always do something about it. It is important to highlight that there are no pre-established recipes that guarantee success, but we would like to share some ideas to help children and adolescents feel healthy within the school context:
By Amiela Spector (Director of Ieladeinu)
Dear parents:
Many of us, right or wrong, are big critics of our children’s school and year after year we find many reasons to become upset with it. This year, let us propose, as a challenge, to be partners in our children’s education, to become involved instead of being spectators, and show our sons how valuable and important is to be able to go to school.
Our Jewish history constantly shows us how much our Iehudim brothers fought to educate their descendants and how many times this was banned for them.
Today, we have the privilege and the bracha that our children can be educated, many of them in Jewish schools filled with values and mitzvot. So let us make good use of the energy of the beginning to fill the backpack with school supplies but also with willing, enthusiasm, effort, study, learning, understanding, patience, support, and, especially, lots of love.
May Hashem make our children have a wonderful and fruitful school year!