On Wednesday, December 1, 1999, ATID sponsored a symposium on Reforms in the
Traditional Talmud Curriculum. The ATID Fellows and faculty were joined by almost 50
other educators and leaders who had been invited to participate in the discussion.
The discussion revolved around a proposal by Daniel Levy of the Jerusalem Studies
Institute (the proposal can be accessed at http://www.biu.ac.il/ICJI/lookstein/resource/docs/levy.doc)
which suggested broad-based changes in the traditional teaching of Talmud. Recent studies
have demonstrated that high school students, particularly in Israel, find the study of
Talmud to be particularly tiresome and difficult. Levy suggested that a large part of this
trouble stems from the inherent difficulty of the Talmud and its logical structure, which
was not created to be a curriculum for teens. Instead, students should be exposed to a
broad range to topics in Torah She-Baal Peh, through a variety of sources
from different genres and historical periods, rather than the almost exclusive emphasis on
Talmud. Curricula should focus on texts with a more linear logical structure, like
Rambams Mishneh Torah. There should be a great emphasis on the integration of
halakhah and the spiritual values and hashkafot which lie behind the halakhah. A
comprehensive and scaleable curriculum of this kind could be implemented in schools
worldwide, Levy suggested, which would help fascilitate student transfer from school to
school.
R. Aharon Adler, currently principle of the boys Yeshiva high school, Ner Tamid,
in Hashmonaim, suggested that many of the problems could be solved with a less radical
curricular transformation than that suggested by Levy. Continuity with the traditional
curriculum helps maintain students motivation, by providing them with a sense of
accomplishment in covering a lot of ground in a traditional fashion. School
administrators, however, should realize that different students require different kinds of
teaching. The top students, those with the potential for superior competence in Talmud,
should continue with the curriculum largely as it is practiced. More modest goals should
be set for the middle level students. The students who find Talmud most difficult must be given greater
individual attention, and their problems must be recognized and addressed head on. At the
same time, at all levels of education teachers and administrators must think carefully
about their goals, and teach the sugyot which will help further those goals. In
Adlers high school, teachers identify units of text in the given mesekhta which
emphasize critical educational units, like the structure of the derashot of Chazal,
the passage from the Gemara to the commentary of the Rishonim, or the key words
which serve as sign posts for the question-answer structure of the Gemara. This helps
focus the teaching, and helps the students gain maximal competence in the study of Gemara.
R. Shalom Berger, Ram in Midreshet Lindenbaum and moderator of the LookJed
e-mail list for Jewish educators at Bar-Ilan, agreed that many of the problems could be
solved with less radical changes. He was concerned that the proposal might eliminate the
joy of discovery, which comes through unraveling the complex dialectics of a sugya.
The best and brightest students must be given the real thing, Talmud as it has
been taught traditionally. If not, Berger fears, they will realize that they are not
learning the same way as advanced yeshiva students, and would feel dissatisfied with the
learning opportunities we provide them. When teaching other students, we should avoid
closed and pre-prepared curricula. These curricula can stifle creativity in both students
and teachers, who feel confined by cut-and-pasted sources in a particular order. Taking
into account recent developments in general education, like multiple intelligence,
teachers should be empowered to teach and learn in ways that excite them personally. Such
enthusiasm is contagious. They should also be urged to find new ways of presenting and
preparing material which will spark interest in a diverse student body, Berger suggested.
R. Yair Kahn, Ram in Yeshivat Har Etzion, argued that empirical
evidence indicates that Gemara in a traditional fashion can be quite popular. The crisis
should be dealt with be rekindling the interest in traditional Gemara, rather than by
modifying the curriculum. In fact, among many segments of the modern-Orthodox community
there is a resurgence of interest in Gemara. Hence, there is little reason for broad-based
changes. Integration of Gemara with philosophy and hashkafah may water-down the
autonomous methodology of Talmud study. Indeed, to the extent that there is a crisis, it
comes from an insistence, common in some Israeli circles, on finding spiritual values
behind each sugya or details of the halakhah. Students who think that they will
find spiritual meaning in each sugya will only be disappointed. This
disappointment, rather than the Talmud itself, causes frustration. R. Kahn suggested that
teachers should chose particular chapters and topics which are likely to spark interest
among young students. Yet, these sections should be taught in much the same way they were
taught in the past.
R. Chaim Brovender, president of ATID and Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Hamivtar in Efrat,
emphasized the importance of the resonance with history that is captured in traditional
Talmud study. Brovender, commenting at the close of the discussion which followed the four
main presentations, stated that there is something enervating about the claim that
cognitive based text study is a religious experience, and this comes to the fore when
using a traditional method of study. The proposal argues for changing the goal of study.
Instead of training the tradtional lamdan, it tries to create a well-rounded
student. This change will lose both the resonance with history, and the religious power of
the lamdan model. He suggested using the open-ended Beit Medrash model,
which if done properly would allow each student to create an individualized
curriculum that would match his needs, goals, and skill level. Still, it is the
teachers obligation to create an atmosphere of honest search and personal growth in
this Beit Medrash, and to help place the Talmud study in the proper context of
religious and spiritual growth. Finally, R. Brovender called for returning lay people to
the classroom. Students, who often look up to successful laymen, have a lot to gain from
the personal contact with a successful businessman who takes Torah seriously.
The evening was
ATIDs first attempt to provide a forum for deep, serious and new thinking on
critical issues facing our community. ATID is dedicated to the idea that we, who are
involved, and we who care deeply about Jewish education, need not agree with each other.
On the contrary. On a certain plane, it may be preferable that we do not agree with each
other on all matters. However, we are committed to the idea that all of us, Jewish
educators broadly defined, need to find opportunities to come together to disagree, to
exchange ideas, to become open to new ways of examining problems. ATID, in addition to its
role as an ongoing training fellowship, will serve as a forum to bring people together to
discuss issues and to exchange ideas.
This summary was written by Yoel Finkelman.
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