Thursday, February 1, 2018

how to - How do you vet a day school?


How do you go about investigating whether a particular day school is best for your kids? I am most interested in the behavior and attitude of the students and the professionalism of the teachers and staff. I realize that it's possible to get some sense of these by visiting, but the feel one gets from a single visit is skewed by the halo effect induced by the presence of the visitor. It seems that it would be difficult to get a good sense of these things by asking around because anyone who knows about the school is likely to present a biased perspective based on their own experience, and because frank talk on these topics veers uncomfortably close to lashon hara.



Answer



There are some objective questions that can be asked that may help.


BEHAVIOR/ATTITUDE OF STUDENTS



  • How much of the school day/year is devoted to teaching of midot?



  • Does the school arrange activities outside of the school that would encourage good character like field trips to nursing homes for "Bikur Cholim"?




  • A subjective but perhaps more easily observed without getting into lashon harah areas: Look at the youth groups in your local shul: Is there any correlation between the kids who are respectful and those who are not and the schools they attend?




PROFESSIONALISM OF TEACHERS AND STAFF



  • What kind of continuing education does the school provide?

  • Do the school administrators attend professional conferences to stay on top of the latest methods in Jewish/secular education?


  • Has the school brought in professional consultants in the development of it's curriculum or other programs?

  • Also look at the board: What kind of professional development have they had? It's not uncommon in Jewsih schools to have the board try to micromanage the principal and other school adminsitrators. The board should not be discussing individual classroom situations and parent complaints. Hopefully they have vetted and hired a trusted administrator and should only be doing periodic evaluations, not trying to run the day to day operations of the school themselves. Overseeing the school financial stability should be their primary role. When you have parents on the baord with their own adgenda who are not educators, and allowing their own issues to supercede the big picture, the school's overall professional conduct suffers.


Hopefully there are a couple useful ideas in there.


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