What do you wish more people understood about your job?

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

MORE TO EXPLORE

Preventing the Summer Slide

Small efforts, big impacts We know how quickly children grow when learning is consistent—and how quickly skills can fade when routines disappear for months. The “Summer Slide” is real. Children can lose foundational academic skills, and even social and emotional progress, over the break. For some, September feels less like a continuation and more like starting all over again. A few intentional moments each week throughout the summer can help reinforce and protect the skills students worked hard to master during the year. That said, summer was never meant to be a third semester. Young children still need rest, play, family time, and freedom—and the goal isn’t to push them toward new skills. It’s simply to preserve what they already know.    The Balance According to Mrs. Sara Chaya Farbstein, PhD, Intervention Specialist for Torah Umesorah’s Diverse Learners Initiative, assigning summer homework three times a week is sufficient for maintaining

Read More »

Let Summer Refill You 

If you had a quiet moment this summer, what would you want to get better at? This one isn’t for everyone. Some of you are busier in July than in January — summer jobs, kids home, camps, family. If that’s you, bookmark this for when things settle.  But if you do find yourself with a quiet mid-morning once the kids are out, or a calm early evening before the night gets going — that might be exactly enough. Torah Umesorah is offering sessions built for exactly those pockets of time. As little as 20 minutes, and you walk away with something real and usable for your classroom. Live   Zoom or phone sessions Scheduled during mid-morning and early evening hours, when things tend to quiet down. On your own time   Recorded sessions Listen whenever works for you — folding laundry, on a walk, or with a cup of coffee.

Read More »

For the Teacher Who Can’t Find the Words

For the Teacher Who Can’t Find the Words  The last day of school has a feeling all its own. Backpacks bulge with the year’s worth of seforim and workbooks. The classroom looks a little bare already. Coat hooks hold one last sweater. And somewhere between the goodbyes, you find yourself wondering where the time went.  And then they’re gone. Just like that, the room that held so much — the noise, the questions, the breakthroughs, the giggles — goes quiet. There’s a particular hollow feeling that settles in when the last talmidah walks out the door, a mix of pride and nostalgia that’s hard to put into words. You want to stop them on their way out. You want to tell them how much they’ve grown, how much you’ve grown, how this year meant something. But you also know — because you know them — that a heartfelt speech from

Read More »

The Kesher That Lasts Beyond the Classroom

The school year is winding down — and if you’re like most teachers we know, you’re not quite ready to say goodbye to your students. You’ve given these girls more than lessons. You’ve given them your time, your warmth, and a piece of your heart.  When a student opens her mailbox in July and finds a letter from her teacher, it tells her something no lesson plan ever could: You’re still on my mind. You matter to me beyond the classroom. That kesher — that connection — is the kind that lasts a lifetime. Out of school, out of context, and still thinking of her.  Before the last day of school, take a few minutes and jot down one small thing about each student — a moment that stood out, a quality you admire, something she did that made you smile. Don’t overthink it. That small note, written while she’s

Read More »

Send Us A Message

WE THINK YOU'LL LIKE THESE

Week 2: Daven for Her

As we continue the K’mayim Sefira Challenge, we return to a place that quietly shapes everything—our פנימיות. Week 2:Daven for Her   The Challenge Choose

Read More »

Graduations

End-of-year celebrations in early childhood should feel joyful, simple, and meaningful—for both children and teachers. You don’t need anything overproduced to make it memorable; it’s

Read More »

General Studies

At this time we offer classroom setup materials only for General Studies. You can also browse themed bulletin boards by clicking General Studies in the menu.

Grade

1

Grade

2

Grade

3

Grade

4

Grade

5

Grade

6

Grade

7

Grade

8

Bring it up a level with ChinuchHub workshops:

torah (by Torah Umesorah Teacher Center)

Limudei Kodesh

calculator (by Torah Umesorah Teacher Center)

General Studies

toy blocks (by Torah Umesorah Teacher Center)

Early Childhood

by Torah Umesorah Teacher Center

Interactive Supplies

by Torah Umesorah Teacher Center

Browse By Grade

Best
Sellers