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Innovative Thinking Impactful Leadership Community Learnings Change Forward 2010 Annual Report Jewish Education Service of North America

JESNA's Annual Report 2010: Change Forward

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Page 1: JESNA's Annual Report 2010: Change Forward

Innovative Thinking • Impactful Leadership • Community Learnings

Change Forward

2010 Annual ReportJewish Education Service of North America

Page 2: JESNA's Annual Report 2010: Change Forward

www.JESNA.org | 2

On Behalf of Our Leadership

L'Chaim! To Changing Jewish Learning

LCC: Bringing Positive Change to Your Community

This Is the Start of Something Big

Ner Tamid Society

With Deepest Gratitude to Our Supporters

Supporting Jewish Education

Financial Report

Board and Staff

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Inside Back Cover

Table of Contents

“Change is the law of life. And those

who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the

future.—John F. Kennedy

Page 3: JESNA's Annual Report 2010: Change Forward

JESNA: Berman Center for Research & Evaluation | Learnings & Consultation Center | Lippman Kanfer Institute 1 |

If you Google “quotations about change,” you get a LOT of results. It turns out that thinkers and social philosophers have been thinking and philosophizing about the subject for at least 2,500 years. Everyone

from Heraclitus and Confucius to Norman Vincent Peale and Abraham Joshua Heschel has uttered epigrams that express the contradictory nature of our responses to change and its consequences. At JESNA, we are primarily interest-ed in change in its most practical and positive forms—not change for its own sake, but change that moves Jewish education and Jewish life forward to new levels of access, reach, and excellence.

As you will see as you read through this annual report, in order to bring about the change we sought in the past year, we have employed and deployed our most effective strate-gies, tools, and resources in three key areas:

•As thought leaders through the Lippman Kanfer Insti-tute, our “action-oriented think tank.” From the much-heralded Jewish Futures Conference at this year's GA to their ambitious new “Re-Designing Jewish Education for the 21st Century” project, the Lippman Kanfer Institute has not only identified and shared some of the most promising innovative thinking and practices from across the field but has also begun to map out a new direction for how Jewish education is organized and implemented throughout the United States and Canada.

•As program evaluators and consultants through the Berman Center for Research & Evaluation. Over the past eighteen years, the Berman Center has worked with hundreds of funders and program providers to assess the impact of their efforts and take their initia-tives from “good” to “great.” In this past year, Berman Center experts engaged in more than 40 evaluation projects, and you can read for yourself how their work was received by appreciative clients in the pages of this Annual Report.

•As partners and coaches for local communities and their Central Agencies, Federations, synagogues, and schools through the Learnings & Consultation Center. Created only two years ago, the LCC has already es-tablished itself as a knowledge hub and implementation partner for communities across North America. Focusing on complementary Jewish education; new approaches to educator recruitment and retention; professional de-velopment; and the provision of quality online resources, the LCC has honed in on some of the most pressing chal-lenges we face…and worked to develop data-driven solutions that can be adapted to local realities.

Change can excite us, challenge us, and even frighten us, but we cannot allow it to overtake us. Our Google search for quotations about change led us to “There is nothing wrong with change, if it is in the right direction,” attributed to Winston Churchill. In 2010, with the generous support of our leadership and funders, we worked to make change in the best possible direction…forward! As we approach our 30th anniversary in 2011, we want to work with you to con-tinue that forward momentum for the benefit of our children, our communities, and our people.

“All Israel is responsible for one another.—Talmud Shevuot 39a

David Steirman, Chair Don Sylvan, President

On Behalf of Our Leadership

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L ‘Chaim! FY2010 marked the Berman Center's “chai” or 18th year of shaping Jewish educa-tion in North America through evaluation stud-ies, capacity-building, training, and research.

In Jewish tradition, the number 18 is very significant because it is the numerical value of the word “chai,” meaning life. While for some “18” represents good luck, in the context of the Berman Center it represents nearly two decades of change and impact on the Jew-ish educational and communal services sector—helping funders and program providers go from good to great.

The world was a very different place in 1992 when Dr. Leora Isaacs founded JESNA's Berman Center and influenced the now widespread movement toward greater accountability, expanded knowledge, and im-proved practice within Jewish education through stra-tegic evaluation services. Over the years, our clients, staff, and capacity to enrich the field have changed and flourished. As a driving force and advocate for effective program evaluation, the Berman Center's ex-cellence has convinced funders and program provid-ers that evaluation is not only wise, but essential.

L'Chaim!To Changing Jewish Learning

JESNA'S BERMAN CENTER FOR RESEARCH AND EVALUATION IN JEWISH EDUCATION

We cannot teach people anything; we can only help them discover it within themselves.”—Mahatma Gandhi

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As a vanguard in the field, the Berman Center is proud to see how its leadership has contributed to the ex-pansion of an ever more competitive field. The close of our 18th year is a time to reflect and to set our sights on the future.

During FY2010, the Berman Center team engaged in more than 40 evaluation projects of all shapes and sizes, including evaluation studies and consult-ing and capacity-building, for more than 20 Jewish educational and communal service organizations: program providers, funders, central agencies for Jew-ish education, and Jewish Federations. We traveled across North America to forge new partnerships and strengthen existing client and community relationships. We published cutting-edge research in partnership with JESNA's Learnings & Consultation Center and the Lippman Kanfer Institute to meet the existing and emerging needs of the field for meaningful data that help clients plan strategically for their futures. These projects added substantial value to both clients and the Jewish educational and communal services sector, particularly in the areas of congregational change, technology and education, professional development for educators and other professionals, rabbinic edu-cation, and Communities of Practice (CoPs).

Looking forward to our next 18+ years—and to JESNA's 30th Anniversary—the Berman Center is poised to continue its trailblazing work to generate knowledge and change through evaluation. The Ber-man Center will continue to improve its already stel-lar practice as JESNA's “knowledge engine” and will extend the reach and impact of evaluation to improve outcomes for learners, educators, and the Jewish community at large.

“There is nothing wrong with change, if it is in the right direction.—Winston Churchill

We have a long-standing, deep appreciation for JESNA and the work of the Berman Center. In the course of the recent evaluation of The PJ Library, the Berman Center staff was always very professional and very responsive. We were thrilled with the final report and disseminated it widely to our communities, funders, and stakeholders. The senior Berman Center staff member who worked with us was a hero in many ways, including her excellent presentation of the evaluation findings. They are great colleagues you can count on.

—Director, The PJ Library®, The Harold Grinspoon Foundation

We needed an evaluation on a tight schedule for our Fellowship program for principals and the Berman Center came highly recommended. The Berman Center delivered outcomes-based reports with user-friendly visuals that quickly and meaningfully addressed the critical issues. The funding partners, who read through dozens of evaluations annually, remarked that the Berman Center reports were among the most valuable they had seen. The evaluator with whom we worked was a keen observer and skilled professional who delivered insight and understanding with every deadline.

—Educational Director, Department of Professional Development, Torah Umesorah: The National Society for Hebrew Day Schools

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The Berman Center's evaluation services help key players in the field, with a significant focus on the Jewish educational and communal sectors, to better understand their goals, discern the impact of their phi-lanthropy and programming, identify ways to assess return on investment, and create viable pathways to change. The Berman Center's coordinated team ap-proach gives it a competitive edge as it strives to go beyond “doing evaluation” to cultivating and sharing knowledge with clients to increase their capacities for programming and evaluation. We encourage you to contact the Berman Center for Research and Evalua-tion to help your organization maximize the effective-ness of its programs and services.

Among our FY2010 clients, we are proud to include:

•The Harold Grinspoon Foundation (The PJ Library®)

•The Covenant Foundation

•Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit

•The Jewish Education Project

•Jewish Community Relations Council of San Francisco (JCRC)

•Montreal Federation CJA

•Partnership for Effective Learning and Innovative Education (PELIE)

•Oraita: Institute for Continuing Rabbinic Education

•Jewish Education Center of Cleveland (JECC)

•MAKOM

•The Schusterman Rabbinic Fellowship Program

•Mechon Hadar

•Bureau of Jewish Education (BJE) of Greater Los Angeles

•Torah Umesorah

2010 Projects and ClientsCompleted and in Progress

JESNA'S BERMAN CENTER FOR RESEARCH AND EVALUATION IN JEWISH EDUCATION

Our coaching and consultation work with the Berman Center put us on the path to greater effectiveness and efficiency. It translates into all areas of our work in the Jewish community. We are still seeing the impact of what we did with your senior staffer. She was very supportive and available. She convinced me that evaluation was not scary and pushed me to make it a priority. At the same time, she made it really enjoyable.

—Associate Director, JEFF and Informal Education, Alliance for Jewish Education of Metropolitan Detroit

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JESNA'S LEARNINGS AND CONSULTATION CENTER

By intensifying its connections with leading Jewish education representatives in local communities throughout North America, the LCC learns about the most pressing chal-

lenges and proudest accomplishments of local com-munities and acts with laser speed to leverage suc-cesses and provide data-driven solutions.

Using state-of-the-art management software to con-solidate its learnings, the LCC's expert consulting team is fast becoming the central hub connecting commu-nities, suggesting replicable, scalable programs; and aligning JESNA's research and publication agenda to address current and pressing issues. For example:

•We explore and enhance access to government funding and resources for Jewish education through our CoP for Central Agency staff.

•We respond to challenges of declining enrollment and financial resources in part-time Jewish educa-tion by sharing best practices and consulting with communities about ways to leverage resources and enhance quality by merging assets, creating community schools and/or developing new approaches.

•We use what we learn about changes in missions, structures and functions of Central Agencies for Jewish Education to inform and advise communities

LCC: Bringing Positive Change to Your Community

Learning acquired in youth is an inscription on stone.”—Indian Proverb

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and Federations throughout North America about how to maximize the impact of their agencies for Jewish education.

We are changing the way communities approach complementary education through:

The WOW Project—Columbus. Through the ground-breaking collaboration between JESNA and the Jewish Education and Identity Department of the Columbus Jewish Federation, local leaders are creating a community initiative to engage greater numbers of children and families in satisfying and impactful complementary Jewish educational expe-riences by enhancing what exists and developing new program options, using both traditional and non-traditional approaches.

NAACCHHS (the North American Association of Community and Congregational Hebrew High Schools). As a result of the annual conference, we-binars, action research, website, and CoPs facilitated by JESNA, the 50 NAACCHHS schools have intro-duced new curricular resources in areas such as Israel and service learning to their schools, enriched their programming through access to world-class experts, extended their reach through innovative recruitment and retention strategies, and improved their effective-ness through training in pedagogic and administrative practices.

We are changing the way communities and organizations work together and collaborate through:

ACRE (The Alliance for Continuing Rabbinic Edu-cation). JESNA nurtures and cultivates the unique trans-denominational alliance of organizations and institutions that provide continuing rabbinic education.

Through annual conferences, an active website and social media, Alliance members share best practices and conduct joint action-research projects.

The PD Network. The staff in Central Agencies for Jewish Education who organize and provide pro-fessional development for educators in their local communities share knowledge and resources, jointly problem solve, and learn together. By facilitating the network's webinars, e-newsletter, and active listserve, JESNA is changing and improving professional devel-opment in communities throughout North America.

We are bringing about positive change in the re-cruitment, retention, and recognition of Jewish educators in North America through:

The Grinspoon-Steinhardt Awards. In its 18th year, this local-national partnership has heightened recog-nition of excellent local Jewish educators, providing the teachers with well-deserved honor, professional development and opportunities for continued growth and leadership, and raising community consciousness about the value of Jewish education and Jewish edu-cators.

JESNA'S LEARNINGS AND CONSULTATION CENTER

JESNA is a catalyst for transformational change in Columbus' part-time Jewish education. Our work with JESNA has brought us new ways of thinking, innovative ideas, and effective strategies to engage greater numbers of students and their families in exciting, meaningful, and impactful Jewish education.

—Lisa Newmark Chair, Jewish Education and Identity Columbus Jewish Federation

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The Lainer Israel Interns Program. More than 800 young adults have participated in JESNA's signature program that encourages North American college students to explore careers in Jewish education and communal work through coursework while they study abroad at Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University and complete internships when they return stateside

for their senior years. More than 60% of the partici-pants have chosen careers in the Jewish community!

We are changing the way Jewish leaders access information about Jewish education through:

JESNA's Sosland Online Resource Center. The Sosland Online Resource Center is expanding rapidly in terms of both content and utilization. There have been more than 18,600 visits to the Resource Cen-ter in the last year, averaging 1,550 visits per month. In addition to a constantly growing collection of over 750 vetted resources in a broad range of categories, a new webinar library provides easy access to expert presentations, recordings of live discussions, audio, video, and ancillary materials on current critical top-ics. Between September 2009 and September 2010, there were already over 1,000 views of JESNA we-binars, with the number of visitors doubling after six months and continuing to grow. The OpenSource e-newsletter informs over 3,000 subscribers about new and popular Sosland resources each month.

“Teachers and schoolchildren are society's most beautiful ornaments.—Song of Songs (Shir HaShirim)

The Lainer Israel Interns program provided knowledge about the sociology of Jewish education in America and gave me the confidence to move into a Jewish educational administrative position. This was reinforced during the Winter Seminar, as I was introduced to young professionals in Jewish Day School administration.

—Daniel Weiss, Middle School Judaics Principal and the Director of Family Education for the Gross Schechter Day School, Cleveland

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JESNA'S LEARNINGS AND CONSULTATION CENTER

Social Networking. JESNA takes advantage and encourages use of social networking tools (e.g., Face-book) to enhance Jewish education through its CoPs, to keep current and past Lainer Israel Interns engaged with one another, and to disseminate news and infor-mation from the broader Jewish education field.

Websites. By developing multiple websites for its own CoPs and for partner organizations (e.g., ACRE, NAACCHHS), JESNA advances the use of technol-ogy and encourages greater online interaction.

The Publications and Dissemination Project (PDP). Through in-depth synthesis of JESNA evaluations and other relevant research (the Making Jewish Education Work series), more targeted treatment of current issues (Snapshots and Insights), and the newest QuickBytes series of short, highly focused online publications on timely topics, JESNA's LCC provides the field with cur-rent empirical data and incisive analysis that they can readily use and apply in their own communities. In ad-

dition to publishing in print or on-line, LCC staff brings PDP publications to local communities. For example, LCC workshops in Houston and Boca Raton explored how to apply best-practices from Making Jewish Edu-cation Work: Professional Development for Teachers (such as contextualized on-site PD) in local settings.

JESNA and NAACCHHS have brought increased respect and attention to the arena of Jewish supplementary secondary education. As the Jewish Community High School of Gratz College plans for the future, the ability to access knowledge and information about best practices in the field is an enormous benefit.

—Ari Goldberg, Gratz College

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Since it began its work five years ago, the Lippman Kanfer Institute has identified, de-veloped, and shared innovative thinking and practices from across the field of Jewish

education. The Institute's ideas and initiatives, carried out through an array of partnerships and involving hundreds of educational activists and leaders, have begun to map out new possibilities and directions for how we organize and implement Jewish education in North America.

During 2010 the Lippman Kanfer Institute launched its most ambitious initiative to date, Redesigning Jewish

Education for the 21st Century: Accelerating the Mo-mentum for Change.

The Redesigning Jewish Education initiative is a bold effort to connect the change makers already at work throughout the field and to mobilize a movement for change that can make today's exceptional models of excellence the norm for Jewish educational practice in the years ahead.

At the heart of the Redesigning initiative are conversa-tions, one on one and in groups, designed to enable those who care deeply about Jewish learning and the

This Is the Start of Something Big

The future is already here, it's just not evenly distributed.”—William Gibson

JESNA'S LIPPMAN KANFER INSTITUTE

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JESNA'S LIPPMAN KANFER INSTITUTE

“Jewish future to both dream and reflect. The Institute this year has convened a number of such conversa-tions, in San Francisco, New York, Miami, and Hous-ton, with more scheduled for 2011. Through these gatherings, individuals working in different domains of Jewish education (day schools, congrega-tions, JCCs, Hillels, camps, central agencies) and playing different roles have been able to talk candidly about what inspires them in their work, what frustrates them, and what the Jewish educational system of the future might look like.

To make such conversations possible on a wider scale, the Institute created the JEWISH EDUCATION CHANGE NET-WORK, a framework for sharing ideas and experiences among all the indi-viduals and institutions—educators, par-ents, community leaders, financial sup-porters, academics, learners—who see themselves as participants in building the Jewish educational system of the 21st cen-tury. The NETWORK and its digital hub at www.jedchange.net are key elements in a grassroots strategy to create a Jewish educational system that provides powerful holistic learning that is both content-rich and life-relevant, in which learners and families are partners and co-creators of their educa-tional experiences.

To help launch the Redesigning Jewish Education ini-tiative and the JEWISH EDUCATION CHANGE NET-WORK, the Lippman Kanfer Institute joined with three other partners, the Jewish Education Project (NY), the Covenant Foundation, and the Jewish Federations of North America, to organize the first Jewish Futures Conference, held at the JFNA General Assembly in

November. More than 350 participants heard from world-class keynote speakers about the new social, cultural, organizational, and technological environ-ment for Jewish learning in the 21st century and got

glimpses of what a new Jewish education might look like from four young visionaries. The

Conference highlighted the urgent need to rethink assumptions from the ground up about such critical questions as how we engage learners, and how we blend tradition and new sensibilities in a world being remade almost daily.

The Institute's Jewish Education 3.0 (JE3) initiative on technology and Jew-ish education pushed forward its efforts to focus attention on the potential of digital media to transform Jewish learn-ing and teaching. The Institute joined with the Berman Jewish Policy Archive at Wagner-NYU in the Spring to con-vene a pioneering conference on the future of technology and Jewish edu-cation, and with the Jewish Education Project and Darim Online in the Fall to convene a diverse group of stakehold-ers to explore the challenges of building

an “ecosystem” to support the expanded development and use of digital resources

for Jewish education.

In 2010, with special support from the Lippman Kan-fer Family Foundation, the Institute partnered with Avoda Arts and the Foundation for Jewish Culture to launch a major effort to build awareness and support for expanded use of the arts in K-12 Jewish educa-tion. This initiative included a convening in New York that brought together artists, educators, funders, and other advocates for arts education from across the

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JESNA'S LIPPMAN KANFER INSTITUTE

Nothing endures but change.”—Heraclitus

continent and from both the Jewish and general worlds for an intensive exploration of current models. Working groups then developed recommendations for strategies to strengthen the role and impact of the arts in Jewish education. The initiative's report, Jewish Education and the Arts: Realizing the Potential, is serving as the spring-board for proposals to put these strategies into action.

As the Lippman Kanfer Institute builds momentum for the Redesigning Jewish Education initiative it continues to nurture and draw on the many connections and rela-tionships it has built over the past several years:

•In congregational education—Growing out of its work with leaders of congregational educational change initiatives, the Institute organized a panel on the Rabbi's role in congregational education at the

annual conference of the Alliance for Continuing Rabbinic Education (ACRE).

•In day school education—The Institute partnered with the LCC to present a session at the PEJE Assem-bly for Advancing the Day School Field on Recon-ceptualizing the Future of Day Schools.

•In promoting Jewish social entrepreneurship—The Institute joined with Jewish Jumpstart and JFNA to publish Haskalah 2.0, a report and reflections on the Think Tank on Jewish Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship held in Toronto.

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Be the change you want to see in the world.” —Mahatma Gandhi“

Ner Tamid Society

The Ner Tamid, eternal light, graces every synagogue as a symbol of G-d's continuing presence in our lives and in our communities. It is the light of Torah, of Jewish learning and teaching. We chose this most meaningful symbol to honor the generous individuals and foundations who have chosen to invest in our future through their commitments of $100,000 or more to JESNA's endowment campaign. The members of the Ner Tamid Society are dedicated to ensuring the light of Torah never dims, that it continues to illuminate our path and guide our deeds across the generations.

We are truly grateful to these farsighted supporters, whose acts of loving- kindness will enable us to fulfill our commitment to Jewish education, not just now, but into perpetuity. Like the Ner Tamid itself, their passion to give every Jewish child the gift of a rich and wondrous heritage can burn without interruption.

For more information about planned giving opportunities, please call us at 212-284-6886.

Commitments of $1,000,000 or more

•Madeleine and Mandell L. Berman•Lippman Kanfer Family Foundation

Commitments of $500,000 or more

•Ellie and Mark Lainer, Simha Lainer z”l•Audrey and Albert Ratner, Forest City Enterprises•The Sosland Foundation•Rabbi Isaac Toubin Memorial Fund

Commitments of $250,000 or more

•Jane and Arthur Brody• Irene and Edward H. Kaplan

Commitments of $100,000 or more

•Helene Berger•Sylvia and Sidney Busis•Cheryl Fishbein and Philip Schatten•Billie and Martin Gold•Jaynie Schultz•Anne and David Steirman•Diane Troderman and Harold Grinspoon•Howard M. Wilchins, in memory of Peggy Wilchins•Donna and Bennett Yanowitz

We extend our thanks as well to Dr. Richard Krugel and the late Boris Shteinshleifer for the endowment funds they have created to benefit JESNA.

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With Deepest Gratitude toOur Supporters

WITH OUR THANKS

We are delighted to express our profound appreciation to the following individuals, families, foundations, and organizations

who have demonstrated their commitment and caring through their generous financial support in the last year.

Contributors of $250,000 and more

•Madeleine and Mandell L. Berman

•Lippman Kanfer Family Foundation

Contributors of $100,000 to $249,999

•Anonymous•Ellie and Mark Lainer•Harold Grinspoon Foundation•The Lasko Family Foundation•Steinhardt Foundation for Jewish Life

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WITH OUR THANKS

Contributors of $50,000 to $99,999

•Anonymous•The Covenant Foundation• Irene and Edward H. Kaplan•Legacy Heritage Fund, Ltd.•Anne and David Steirman•Diane Troderman

Contributors of $25,000 to 49,999

•Joseph S. Kanfer•Cheryl Fishbein and Philip Schatten•Blanche and Neil Sosland•The Sosland Foundation

Contributors of $10,000 to $24,999

•Helene and Ady Berger•The Russell Berrie Foundation

•The Crown Family•Gary and Cari Gross•Sharon and Stephen Seiden•The Skillman Foundation•Francine Lavin Weaver•Arnee R. and Walter A. Winshall•Bennett and Donna Yanowitz

Contributors of $5,000 to $9,999

•Jane and Arthur Brody•Sandra and Arnold Gold•Cass and Sheldon Gottlieb•Helen and Sam Kaplan Charitable Foundation•Sally and Richard Krugel•The Nirenberg Foundation•Jo-Ann Nevas Price•Robert H. Sachs•Kyla and Mitchell C. Schneider

“To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.

—Winston Churchill

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“I believe that every right implies a responsibility; every opportunity, an obligation; every possession, a duty...” —John D. Rockefeller

” •Shirley and Allan Solomon•Carol Brennglass Spinner•UJA-Federation of New York•Gail Stein Weinstein•Sue and Howard Wilchins

Contributors of $2,500 to $4,999

•Saby Behar•Sylvia and Sidney Busis•Fred Claar•Niki and Henry Fayne•Genine Macks Fidler•David Fishman•Billie Gold•Sandra and Arnold Gold•Gene R. Hoffman•Louise and Morton J. Macks•Searle Mitnick•Sidney Pertnoy•James A. Schwarz•Lisa and Gary Shiffman•Anne and Donald Sylvan•Sherry and Jonathan Woocher

Contributors of $1,000 to $2,499

•Anonymous•Lucille Alderman•Circle of Service Foundation•Beverly Bloom Fellman•Ellen P. Goldstein•Amy Kaufman Goott•Paula and Jerry Gottesman•Howard Jacobson

•Temma and Al Kingsley•Beverly and Arthur Liss•Cynthia and Richard Morin•David and Inez Myers Foundation•New Kalman Sunshine Fund, Inc.•Carol and David Robbins•Elaine and Saul Schreiber•Sheila Schwartz•Bruce Sholk•Eve Kresin Steinberg•Sarah and Ness Tiano•Ellen Kagen Waghelstein•Libby and Moshe Werthan•Miriam and Bernard K. Yenkin•Lois J. Zachary

Contributors of $100 to $999

•Anonymous•Wendy and Howard Allenberg•Hilda and Alfred Ashley•Stan Baratz•Cindy and David J. Berger•Mark Berger•Rosalie and Lawrence Berman•Lawrence Brandes•Joyce H. and William E. Brodkin•Leonard Brumberg•Susan and Steve Caller•Max Candiotty, Esq.•Renae Cohen•Dr. Robert E. Cohen•Barbara and Daniel Drench•Education for the Future at Tehiya Day School•Elinor and Gustave Eisemann

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WITH OUR THANKS

•Reuben Eisenstein•Seymour Epstein•Esther Feigenbaum•Renee and Steven Finn •Rabbi Lyle A. Fishman•Ruth Frankfurt•Miriam Futernick•Dr. Betsy Gidwitz•Susan and Ronald Goldsmith•Neil and Joyce Goldstein•Stacy and Todd Gorelick•Dr. Gil Graff•Bambi and Robert Granovsky•Rachel and Neil Greenbaum•Laurie Harris•Michal H. Hillman•Herbert and Carol Horowitz•Leora W. Isaacs•Rebecca Reznikoff Isgur•Hyman Israel•Sheryl and Robert Jawetz•JESNA Staff•Joyce and Arthur Joseph•Mark Kamensky•Mimi Karesh•Eleanor M. Katz•The Kohrman Family Foundation• Iris Koller•Steven Kornbluth•Rose and Hal Kravitz•Rabbi Vernon H. Kurtz•Gerald C. Legow•Beth and Todd Leonard•Lee and Luis Lainer•Lori and Jeff Lasday

•Magdovitz Family Foundation•Donald Martin•Alan Mendelson•Bernice E. and Jack A. Meyers•Sandra and Barry Milberg•Barbara and Sol Minsberg•Betty G. Minsk and Malcolm N. Minsk•Sheila and Lawrence C. Pakula•Charles T. Rivkin•Meredith and David Schizer•Rabbi Jonathan Schnitzer•Frank E. Schochet•Rabbi Aaron Schonbrun•Helen and Harold Schwartz•The Ricky and Andrew J.

Shechtel Philanthropic Fund•Norman Sheldon•Lawrence A. Sherman•Robert Sherman•Barbara K. and Larry Shuman•Ellen Singer•Marjorie and Jonathan Slass•Dr. James and Joanne Smith•Eric William Smith•Edward A. and Beth K. Smith Fund•Elene and Herbert Solomon•Jeff and Mindy Sosland•Gail and Robert Stagman•Sherry and Doron Steger•Louise and Jerry Stein•Arthur and Edith Stern Family Foundation•Sharon Margolin Ungerleider•Beate and Henry Voremberg•Harvey L. Weisberg•Eric and Mona Yorke•Alan Ziskin

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Contributors of $25 to $99

•Jenny Aisenberg•David and Barbara August•Judy and Steven Baruch•Andrea and Randy Berkow•Annette Berkowitz•Nancy and Jacob Bloom•Elaine and Jerome B. Blumenthal•Rabbi Howard Buechler•Lottie and Henry M. Burger•Stanley Cohen and Suzanne Ducat•Cheryl and Edward Dauber•Brenda and Jerome Deener•Cheryl Diamond•Michelle Florio Diamond and Joel S. Diamond•Thomas M. Divine•Elizabeth T. and John W. Edelglass•Mark D. Eisemann•Margit and Harvey Feldman

•Patricia Fertel•Cheryl and Rich Fialkoff•Lynn D. Flanzbaum•Robert Folberg•Seymour Fried•Jerald Gottlieb•Donna Halinski•Andrew Halpert•Muriel B. Handmaker•Stuart Kaback•Gary and Ilene Katz•Marilyn and Lawrence Katz•Rabbi Jan David Katzew•Rabbi David-Seth Kirshner•Jeffrey and Marilyn Klein •Rose Kleinman•Rabbi Murray Kohn•Eric and Harriet Leibovitch •Betty and Barry Leif

Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from one generation to another.” —Gilbert K. Chesterton

“Scholars enhance peace in the world.

—Talmud, Berakhot

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WITH OUR THANKS

•Arthur Leon•Rika Levin-Reisman•Jacqueline and Howard H. Levine•Doris and Eli S. Levy•The Madav IX Foundation•Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mandon•Sivia and Norman Mann•Carolyn H. and David H. Maretsky•Hermione and Sol Matsil•Ruth Mendelsohn•Naomi Yadin-Mendick and David Mendick•Stephen Messner and Elizabeth Prelinger•Lawrence L. Mintz•Bette S. Paris and Reynold F. Paris•Harriet Perlmutter-Pilchick•Sydney Perry•Barbara Pinsof•Albert Polovoy•Dr. Jack Porter• Ira Rezak and Brigitte Bedos-Rezak

•Honorable Steven D. Robinson•Dr. Wendy J. Rosov•Edward Saltzberg•Professors Ruth Langer and Jonathan D. Sarna•Diana M. Savit•Paul Schwartz•Elizabeth and Alan Shulman•Harriet Steckler•Hannah Stollmon•Rochelle and Robert Stone•Jill and Gary Swergold•Marshall and Karen M. Sylvan•Ellen and Scott Teller•Rita Waldor•Ophra Weisberg•Barbara and Alan Weisblatt• Irma Weissbein•Becky and Daniel Wilchins•Dr. Julian Yudelson

• Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta • Jewish Community Federation of Baltimore • Combined Jewish Philanthropies, Greater Boston’s Jewish Federation • Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago •Jewish Federation of Cleveland •Allied Jewish Federation of Colorado •Columbus Jewish Federation • Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas • Jewish Federation of Delaware • Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit •UJA Federation of Greenwich • Jewish Federation of Greater Houston • Jewish Federation of Jacksonville • Jewish Federation of Greater Long Beach and West Orange County • Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles • Jewish Community of Louisville • Memphis Jewish Federation • United Jewish Communities of MetroWest New Jersey • Greater Miami Jewish Federation • Milwaukee

Jewish Federation • Minneapolis Jewish Federation • UJA-Federation of New York • Jewish Federation of Northeastern New York • UJA Federation of Northern New Jersey • Jewish Federation of Ocean County • Jewish Federation of Greater Orange County • Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County • Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh • Jewish Federation of Rhode Island • Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties • Jewish Federation of Sarasota-Manatee • Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle • Jewish Federation of Southern Arizona • Springfield Jewish Federation • Jewish Federation of St. Louis • United Jewish Federation of Tidewater • Jewish Federation of Greater Washington

We also offer our thanks for the enduring commitment of the Jewish Federation system. The allocations made by the member Federations of the Alliance and other individual Federations not only provide sustaining support, but also serve as a testament to the strength and value

of our continuing partnership with the Jewish communities across North America.

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J ESNA works in partnership with a diverse and dynamic array of innovators, educators, funders, and decision-makers across North America who share our commitment to excellence in Jewish

education. We invite you to join with us and with them to ensure that every Jewish learner in our communities has access to the richness of our tradition—through experiences, in classrooms, in books, or online—to ensure our future as a people.

Philanthropic support for our work can similarly come in many forms:

•through undesignated gifts that allow JESNA to allocate funds where they are most urgently needed

•through designated gifts that allow you to fund a specific project

•through endowments and planned gifts that help ensure we can continue to provide for Jewish education in the future

•through tribute and memorial gifts which honor or congratulate loved ones on all occasions.

If your company has a matching gifts program as an employee benefit, your gift to JESNA could be eligible for such a match. The Human Resources office at your workplace can tell you more about this benefit and how it can help you increase the impact of your gift to Jewish education.

For more information on giving please call our Development department at 212-284-6886 or visit our website at www.jesna.org and look for the “Support Jewish Education” button.

Join us in our mission to advance Jewish learning and transform Jewish lives

SUPPORTING JEWISH EDUCATION

“Example isn't another way to teach, it is the only way to teach.” —Albert Einstein

*JESNA’s work is critical if Jewish education is to fulfill its promise for North American Jewry in the 21st Century and beyond. This list contains gift items that symbolically represent our work. Each gift is a donation to JESNA and will be used where it is needed most in our work toward the consistent excellence in Jewish education that we all seek.

A gift of $36 helps JESNA maintain our high quality of work in communities across the United States and Canada

How your contribution can make a difference*

A gift of $100 enables one young Jewish education innovator to participate in a conference where his/her project can be nurtured and developed by mentors and peers

A gift of $180 enables our staff to conduct the research and vetting that bring ten valuable new resources online for easy access by educators in your community

A gift of $250 helps us produce a two-hour “webinar” on professional development for educators, attended by key staff from Central Agencies for Jewish education in communities like yours across North America

A gift of $1,000 provides an opportunity for a college student in our Lainer MASA Israel Interns program to attend an annual retreat that reinforces their commitment to a career in Jewish education when they graduate

A gift of $10,000 or more can provide in-depth evaluation and consulting services to program providers serving Jewish children, teens, or adults in your community

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Condensed Statement of Financial Activities (Fiscal year ended June 30, 2010)

Financial Report of ManagementThe financial statements of the Jewish Education Service of North America, Inc. (JESNA) are audited annually by an independent firm. JESNA received an unqualified opinion as of June 30, 2010, from its auditors, which found that the combined financial statements prepared by JESNA management were presented fairly in all material respects in ac-cordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

A copy of the full financial statements with the Independent Auditor’s Report for the year ended June 30, 2010, is filed with the New York State Department of Law, Office of the Attorney General Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271, and may be obtained upon request by writing to these offices, or directly to:

Jewish Education Service of North America, Inc. Accounting Department 318 West 39th Street, 5th Floor New York, NY 10018

Note: Financial activities noted above relate to operating activities for fiscal year 2010. Per Financial Accounting Standards (FAS), JESNA also recorded a non-operating ex-pense relating to FAS #13 (Accounting for Leases) in the amount of $304,839, which will affect the total reported as "Change in Unrestricted Net Assets" in our final audit report for FY2010.

RevenuesContributions (designated) $1,048,800Federation Allocations 872,068Earned Income 790,576Contributions (un-designated) 284,169Contributions Towards Relocation 216,800Contributions (donated services) 33,818Agency Dues 18,525Fiscal Sponsorships 11,157

Total Revenues $3,275,913

ExpensesPersonnel Costs $2,265,486Occupancy Costs 320,772Travel, Conferences & Meetings 256,392Professional Fees 170,319Supplies & Equipment 114,512Communications & Mailings 63,333Awards, Grants & Fellowships 47,000Other Expenses 41,627Professional Fees (donated services) 33,818Fiscal Sponsorships 11,157

Total Revenues $3,324,416

Change in Unrestricted Net Assets ($48,503)

24%EarnedIncome 27%

FederationAllocations

31%Contributions(designated)

7%ContributionsTowards Relocation

1%Contributions

(donated services)

1%Agency Dues

9%Contributions(undesignated)

8%Travel,Conferences& Meetings

10%OccupancyCosts

69%Personnel Costs

3%Supplies & Equipment

5%Professional Fees

2%Communications & Mailings

1%Awards, Grants & Fellowships

1%Other Expenses

1%Professional Fees (donated services)

FINANCIAL REPORT

Revenues

Expenses

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Board Members (as of December 2010)

Staff (as of December 2010)

ChairDavid Steirman

Honorary ChairMandell L. Berman

First Vice ChairCass W. Gottlieb

Vice ChairsSandra O. Gold, Ed.D.Searle MitnickCarol RobbinsHoward M. WilchinsArnee R. Winshall

SecretaryCarol Brennglass Spinner

Assistant SecretaryEllen Kagen Waghelstein

TreasurerPhilip Schatten

Assistant TreasurerGary Gross

Board MembersAlan AdesCarol AuerbachSaby BeharAnn BermanFred ClaarDr. Helene Kalson CohenJeffrey CorbinSeymour EpsteinBeverly Bloom FellmanDavid FishmanEdward FrimNancy GartBrenda Gewurz

Amy Kaufman GoottDr. Gil GraffTemma KingsleyShelley KreigerDr. Richard KrugelPatty MasonCheryl MooreCynthia MorinSidney PertnoyCharles RatnerRobert H. SachsMarty ScheckMitchell C. SchneiderRobert ShermanGary ShiffmanShirley SolomonDr. Blanche SoslandEve Kresin SteinbergGail WeinsteinDr. Lois J. Zachary

Life MembersRobert ArnowHelene BergerArthur BrodyBillie GoldNeil GreenbaumJoseph KanferMark LainerMark E. SchlusselDiane TrodermanBennett Yanowitz, Esq.

Ex OfficioDonald A. Sylvan, Ph.D. President

Office of the ExecutiveDonald Sylvan, Ph.D. PresidentKate Lutzner, J.D.Assistant to the President and Office Manager

Lippman Kanfer InstituteJonathan Woocher, Ph.D. Chief Ideas Officer Director, Lippman Kanfer InstituteRebecca Leshin Program Assistant

Berman Center for Research and EvaluationRenae Cohen, Ph.D. Director, Berman Center for Research and Evaluation

Shira Rosenblatt, Ph.D. Associate Director

Lauren Raff, M.P.H. Senior Project ManagerKate O’Brien, M.A. Senior Research WriterMiri Rozenek, M.A. Research AssociateAda Maradiaga Administrator

Learnings and Consultation CenterLeora Isaacs, Ph.D. Vice-President, Programs and Organizational Learning Director, Learnings and Consultation CenterSteven Kraus, M.A.Education ConsultantDevorah Silverman, M.S.W., M.A.Education Consultant

Jenny Aisenberg, M.A.Knowledge Development ManagerDena Wachtel Stein, M.A.Project ManagerAda Maradiaga AdministratorNa'ama RosenbergAcademic Year Intern

Institutional AdvancementEllen Goldstein Vice President, Institutional AdvancementRika Levin-Reisman, M.B.A.Chief Marketing OfficerRebecca Leshin Development AssociateViolet Lucca WebmasterMargalit RosenthalAcademic Year Intern

FinanceRalia Wagner Chief Financial OfficerOlga Avezbakiev Accounting AssistantMilana Isakova Accounting Assistant

HR/Office ManagementKaitlin BarryHuman Resources AssociateVernessa Lewis Operations Department Shavon Hicks Operations Department Assistant

Israel OfficeDavid Resnick, Ph.D. Director, Israel Office

BOARD AND STAFF

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Only the lesson which is enjoyed can be learned well.”

—Yehudah HaNasi, Talmud

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© 2011 Jewish Education Service of North America2010 Annual Report