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School report: the US may be bigger but we teach better

Our expertise lies in delivering creative lessons

May 25, 2025 10:29
PaJeS.jpg
Uk visitors to the Prizmah conference (photo: PaJeS)
2 min read

I imagine it’s rather rare for a group of UK-based Jewish school leaders to be plucked from their day-jobs and sent to the USA on a fact-finding mission. I was lucky enough to be one of PaJeS’ Lira Winston Fellows who earlier this year was ferried across the pond to participate in the Prizmah conference for Jewish educators.

The conference was quite something to behold, a slick operation at a vast Boston hotel, packed with 1,500 Jewish educators and professionals. All there to learn, teach and network in order to keep us at the cutting edge of how to educate our children.

After the conference, we had the privilege of visiting two of Boston’s Jewish schools. The American Jewish school system is privately sponsored, fee-based and provides for a significant minority of Jewish children educated in the USA.

We were warmly welcomed at the Rambam School: a co-ed, Orthodox, all-through school with a distinctly “American High School” look and about 430 students. Then, after lunch, we went to see Gan Academy: a pluralist, co-ed, 11-18 school – newer than Rambam and with a beautiful building whose architecture seeks to embody the school’s ethos: lots of open spaces, light and high ceilings – all in a very swish, modern building with cutting-edge facilities and 350 students.