October 19th, 2011

Cross-posted from JUF News.

It was dusk on a Shabbat evening in the Old City of Jerusalem. Dressed conservatively, I walked toward a pile of ancient bricks, piled 25 feet high in the air, creating a magnificent wall. I stared hesitantly and pondered, “Could this really be anything more than a wall?”

As I entered, I was overwhelmed: women praying, crying and divulging their deepest hopes, prayers and wishes, and placing them into the deep crevices between rocks where the mortar has been chipped away. I was also skeptical—but that skepticism was masking a deeper desire to feel something, anything that would lead me to tears. Read More »

View Comments
August 1st, 2011

This is the first in a three-part series that also appears on eJewishPhilanthropy. The interviews were conducted by Abigail Pickus, an Israel-based freelance writer.

Yael Assor, 26, is a social activist living in Jerusalem. Originally from Be’er Sheva, she moved to Jerusalem toattend Hebrew University, which was where she learned about Bema’aglei Tzedek (“Circles of Justice”), an organization that raises awareness and engages the public to take action to make lasting changes in the area of social justice. Today, Yael is the coordinator of the Tav Chevrati (“Social Seal”), a certificate granted by Bema’ageli Tzedek to restaurants in Israel that treat their workers ethically and are handicap accessible. She is also pursuing a Master’s degree from Hebrew University in sociology and anthropology.

Recently, Yael discussed Tav Chevrati and Bema’ageli Tzedek with 57 Teach For America corps members visiting Israel under the auspices of the REALITY Israel Experience program. During the 10-day trip, corps members explore Israel’s education and social justice systems, gain exposure to top Israeli leaders and thinkers, and uncover and re-commit to the values that drive their passion for public service. REALITY Israel Experience is a project of the Schusterman Family Foundation and the Samberg Family Foundation, in partnership with Teach for America.

Yael tells eJewishPhilanthropy about grassroots activism and her vision of an ideal society. Read More »

View Comments
July 25th, 2011

For 10 days, 57 Teach For America corps members will explore Israel’s education and social justice systems, gain exposure to top Israeli leaders and thinkers, and uncover and recommit to the values that drive their passion for public service. Follow along on their REALITY Israel Experience!

The last leg of our journey was truly amazing. We spent Thursday morning at a school in Jerusalem with students and teachers from a variety of alternative Israeli schools: The Rogozin-Bialik school in Tel Aviv, recently featured in the Academy Award-winning documentary, “Strangers No More,” whose students come from 48 countries around the world; the Du Leshoni School in Jerusalem, made up of Jewish, Arab and Christian students; and the Keshet School in Jerusalem, made up of both secular and religious Jewish students.

We also heard from a panel of esteemed educators and administrators, including a school superintendent, the principal of the Du Leshoni and Keshet Schools, and an educator at the Rogozin School. The chance to interact with students and teachers from such a wide spectrum of backgrounds and perspectives was inspiring and invigorating. Read More »

View Comments
July 20th, 2011

Cross-posted from MyJewishLearning.

The REALITY Israel Experience is a unique leadership development opportunity for selected Teach For America corps members to spend 10 days exploring Israel’s education and social justice systems, gaining exposure to top Israeli leaders and thinkers, and uncovering and recommitting to the values that drive their passion for public service. It is a program of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation and the Samberg Family Foundation, in partnership with Teach For America and the ROI Community of young Jewish innovators.

I will admit it: I am not the best Jew. Bacon cheeseburgers are a personal favorite, I love a good New Orleans shrimp po boy, and I hate Seinfeld. I also messed around a lot in Hebrew school and as a result only remember three things: 3 words of Hebrew, lessons about the Holocaust, and a lesson about Masada.

Masada, in particular, truly gripped me. It was a mystery why people would voluntarily kill themselves–and yet, in such tragedy we find honor and beauty. I could never wrap my mind around it, and when I saw the itinerary for Teach for America’s REALITY program, I became excited when I saw we would be seeing Masada. I was enthusiastic about the opportunity to look for answers and to gain a deeper understanding as to why this tragedy happened and what we could learn about it. Read More »

View Comments
July 14th, 2011

Apparently we aren’t the only ones who think the 57 Teach For America corps members currently in Israel on the REALITY Israel Experience are noteworthy. Several media outlets in Israel and abroad are tracking their journey. Here are just a few to get you started—we will continue to keep you updated! Oh, and  be sure to check out the photos on Flickr!

Radio

  • Interview with Andrew Mandel, Teach For America’s Vice President of Interactive Learning and Development on Kol Yisrael

    Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

    Read More »

View Comments
July 12th, 2011

Cross-posted from eJewishPhilanthropy. Check out photos from the REALITY Israel Experience 2011.

In just a few short hours, 57 up-and-coming U.S. change agents will be on their way to Israel to connect with local peers and leaders – and their counterparts at Teach First Israel – through the REALITY Israel Experience for Teach For America corps members program. While here, they will learn from one another on how best to inspire students in disadvantaged areas to succeed in school and to work on a communal vision of educational equality.

The encounter is just one stop for Teach For America corps members on the REALITY Israel Experience program, supported by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation and the Samberg Family Foundation in partnership with Teach For America and the ROI Community of Young Jewish Innovators. The 10-day trip is designed to introduce corps members to Israel’s education and social justice systems, give them exposure to top Israeli leaders and thinkers, and help them uncover and recommit to the values that drive their passion for public service.

Speaking on behalf of both foundations, Lynn Schusterman told eJP, “By partnering with Teach For America to create the REALITY program, we hope to inspire corps members to embark on meaningful engagement with their personal journeys and with Israel, as well as cultivate long-term dedication toward Jewish community involvement and service.” Read More »

View Comments
July 12th, 2011

Teach For America and Teach First Israel Join Forces to Build a Global Movement to End Educational Inequity

57 up-and-coming U.S. change agents to connect with Israeli peers and leaders through the REALITY Israel Experience for Teach For America Corps Members program

July 12-24, 2011

Jerusalem—July 12, 2011–Top Teach For America corps members will meet with their Teach First Israel counterparts to learn from one another how best to inspire students in disadvantaged areas to succeed in school and to work on a communal vision of educational equality.

The encounter is just one stop for Teach For America corps members on the REALITY Israel Experience program, supported by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation (CLSFF) and the Samberg Family Foundation in partnership with Teach For America and the ROI Community of Young Jewish Innovators. The 10-day trip is designed to introduce corps members to Israel’s education and social justice systems, give them exposure to top Israeli leaders and thinkers, and help them uncover and recommit to the values that drive their passion for public service.

“By partnering with Teach For America to create the REALITY program, we hope to inspire corps members to embark on meaningful engagement with their personal journeys and with Israel, as well as cultivate long-term dedication toward Jewish community involvement and service,” said Lynn Schusterman, chair of CLSFF, speaking on behalf of both foundations.

“Our gathering will not stop at trading teaching tips,” said Andrew Mandel, Teach For America’s Vice President of Interactive Learning and Engagement. “It will involve sharing what we are learning from our experiences in the classroom and what larger changes it suggests we must make in our respective countries on behalf of our students and communities.”

Both Teach For America and Teach First Israel are based on a simple but powerful concept: Enlist top college graduates to become lifelong champions for educational equity by first recruiting them to teach for two years with students from low-income backgrounds. They are both part of the Teach For All network—a collection of independent social enterprises working to expand educational opportunities in their respective countries—and are highly selective. Last year, 48,000 people applied for 5,200 spots with Teach For America. Similarly, Teach First Israel chose 90 out 1,400 applicants for the coming school year. In 2011-2012, it will be expanding from Jerusalem, Beer Sheva, Haifa, Horfeish, Holon, Bat Yam, Petach Tikva and Or Yehuda to include schools in Lod, Acco, Kiryat Shmona, Arad and Dimona.

Among the 57 Teach For America corps members that will participate in the 2011 REALITY Israel Experience are:

  • Jessica Bero, who worked as a chef before joining Teach For America, helping to turn around Kansas City’s largest soup kitchen by bringing students in as kitchen staff.
  • Eric Poris, a math teacher at American Horse School on the Pine Ridge Native American Reservation in South Dakota and the only Jew on the reservation. He has also taught in the Swiss Alps, Brazil and Peru.
  • Leora Sher, who taught adolescent AIDS awareness in the villages of South Africa before she began teaching in Chicago.

The REALITY Israel Experience introduces corps members, leaders in their own right, to key Israeli figures in the education and social action movements, and to trailblazing Israeli initiatives like B’Maagalei Tzedek, Atid Bamidbar and Friends of the Earth. Not only will participants examine the values that drive their commitment to public service, they will also explore the connection between Jewish values, public service and how the two reinforce each other.

REALITY trips for Teach for America corps members were also conducted in the summers of 2009 and 2010, and the impact of the visit to Israel is profound. According to The REALITY Israel Experience: An Impact Study, it strengthens the link between participants’ Jewish identity and passion for service while deepening their commitment to social justice and the Teach For America mission.

Rachel Brody embodies REALITY’s transformational power. Before she participated in the first REALITY trip in 2009, she had never been involved in the Jewish community nor did she connect her dedication to teaching students with disabilities to Jewish values. Today she is a PresenTense Fellow in Jerusalem, where she is working on GIM, or Global Inclusion Movement, a social start-up that will train and certify organizations and businesses to integrate people with disabilities.

“I had never felt any connection with Israel or felt particularly Jewish,” Brody said. “Coming here on REALITY, I learned a lot about Israel and Judaism. I felt a connection with Judaism that I did not feel before. I especially identified with tikkun olam and tzedaka.”

Indeed, the REALITY Israel Experience anticipated the finding of the recently released Volunteering + Values: A Repair the World Report on Jewish Young Adults. As reported by CNN, this study underscored the need for programs that help young Jews see their volunteerism through the lens of a Jewish framework to ensure an active, enduring commitment to service and to strengthen the Jewish community’s social impact.

“It is our hope,” said Adam Simon, CLSFF’s Associate National Director, “that the success of the REALITY program will encourage future partnerships with secular service organizations, as well as become a model for engaging young Jews in service as a way to lead richer, more meaningfully Jewish lives.”

The encounter also promises great benefits to the Teach First Israel participants, who have just completed the program’s inaugural year.

“Meetings such as these expand their horizons, enrich their perspective, enable them to see that they are not alone and that teachers in other countries experience similar situations,” said Asaf Banner, CEO and Co-Founder of Teach First Israel, a joint initiative of the Ministry of Education, JDC-Israel, HaKol Hinuch and the Naomi Foundation. “This peer-to-peer opportunity to share tips, knowledge and best practices is empowering. They will come out of it more motivated, knowing they are part of a global movement of young leaders who want to create a better future for children around the world.”

For more information about the REALITY Israel Experience program, please visit www.tfaisraelexperience.org.

Contact:

Roben Kantor, USA: 202-289-7000, ext 6 or rkantor@schusterman.org

Sara Averick, Israel: 052-867-4966 or sara@leadstoryplus.com

Jose Rosenfeld, Israel: 052-287-7646 or jose@leadstoryplus.com

View Comments
May 3rd, 2011

This summer, for the third year running, Team Schusterman will join forces with the Samberg Family Foundation to bring Teach For America corps members on a 10-day trip to Israel to tour, explore, learn first-hand about the Israeli educational system and take a deeper look at the values that drive their professional aspirations and volunteerism.

Map of where the 2011 REALITY Israel participants live.

Out of a record-high 415 applications, 58 corps members were selected for the 2011 REALITY Israel Experience for Teach For America Corps Members, which is scheduled for July 12-24, 2011. Participants hail from 25 of Teach For America’s 39 regions, including the Baltimore, Bay Area, Chicago, Colorado, Connecticut, DC, Detroit, Eastern North Carolina, Greater Boston, Greater New Orleans, Greater Philadelphia Camden, Hawaii, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Memphis, Mid-Atlantic, Mississippi Delta, New York, Rio Grande Valley, South Dakota, South Louisiana, St. Louis and Tulsa.

Read More »

View Comments
February 15th, 2011

On the occasion of Teach For America’s 20th Anniversary Summit, we hosted a Shabbat dinner for 155 Teach For America staff, corps members and alumni who had descended upon Washington, D.C., alongside nearly 11,000 of their colleagues, to take stock of the organization’s progress over the past two decades and to lay out its goals for the future.

The dinner was a celebration of Teach For America’s success and our deep partnership that has taken root in Oklahoma, across the U.S. and in Israel. It was also in recognition of the alumni of the REALITY Teach For America Israel Experience, a program we co-founded with the Samberg Family Foundation that enables corps members to spend 10 days exploring Israel from a service and education perspective, as well as connecting their secular service work as teachers to their personal values and motivations for repairing the world. Read More »

View Comments
January 19th, 2011

This was first published in the JTA.

On Monday, the 25th anniversary of the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, 35 volunteers and 15 Teach For America teachers joined our team in Washington, D.C., to honor the life and legacy of Dr. King through a day of service. Together, they created thousands of study materials for hundreds of students in struggling schools across D.C.

The volunteers came together as a diverse group, from big cities and small towns, a range of professions and varying degrees of Jewish connection. But for those five hours, they were a community united in answering Dr. King’s call to greatness. In fitting testament, each wore a shirt proclaiming:

Everybody can be GREAT because everybody can SERVE. Read More »

View Comments
  • Media Inquiries


    For members of the media seeking further information on CLSFF, contact:
    Roben Kantor
    202-289-7000 ext. 6
    rkantor@schusterman.org