The Kol Ami Religious School's mission is to provide an inclusive environment where students and families engage in Jewish education that fosters a strong sense of identity and community. Because Reform Judaism is a living and evolving faith, we are committed to meeting our families' changing needs and demands.

Curriculum Overview and Class Information

  • Students in the preschool class will learn about Jewish holidays, synagogue life, and begin to interact with the Hebrew Alef-Bet. For many students, this will be their first experience with prayers and Hebrew songs. Through play, students will gain enjoyment for being Jewish, prayers, mitzvot (commandments), and Hebrew letters.

  • In first grade, the focus is on Torah stories and Bible heroes such as Moses and Abraham. Students will have a basic introduction to the Aleph-Bet, along with core oral vocabulary. Students will broaden their knowledge of Israel, Torah, mitzvot (Commandments) and holidays. In addition to the appropriate b’rachot (blessings) over the candles, wine, and challah, student will be introduced to the complete Friday Night Kiddush.

    Second graders begin to learn about Israel and its different regions and cities. Throughout the year students will develop a connection to the land of Israel as they learn about the language, history, geography, and culture. Additionally, students will begin to recognize prayers such as the Sh’ma, V’ahavta, and the appropriate b’rachot (blessings) for each holiday.

    The third grade is the first year that students will be attending Hebrew School for the first time. The focus is on introducing the Hebrew Aleph Bet, learn about the Jewish calendar and Holidays, and develop a personal partnership/relationship with God. Students will make their own calendars while learning about Jewish months, lunar vs. solar year, why we have leap years in the Jewish Calendar, and the differences between the secular and Jewish calendars.

  • The focus in fourth grade is Jewish Values, Biblical and Modern Israel. Students will begin a deeper study of Tanakh (Torah, Neviim (Prophets), K’tuvim (Writings – for example Psalms)). Reading stories from Kings and Prophets whose lives explain the rise and fall of the Hebrew Monarchy will enhance this year’s program. Students will also learn about mitzvot (commandments) throughout the year such as bikur cholim (visiting the sick). Students will be challenged to find a higher meaning in Jewish values while developing an understanding of God, holiness, and their roles as partners.

    The focus for fifth grade is Tikkun Olam and the Jewish Life Cycle. The students will plant seedlings to observe and document not only how we as humans grow, but how that expansion effects the environment, as well as what our responsibilities are to ourselves and to make the world a better place for us and future generations. Students will become familiar with the Erev Shabbat Service, and master the blessing over the candles, wine (Kiddush), and challah. Students will interact with the weekly Torah portion and find ways to incorporate Jewish values with protecting the environment. In exploring the Jewish Life Cycle, students will investigate and dissect all aspect of a Jewish existence such as birth, naming, education, Bar/Bat Mitzvah, growing up, marriage, old age, death, and mourning.

    In sixth grade, students will learn about modern American Jewish history with a focus on Jewish personalities such as poet Emma Lazarus, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, labor rights activist Emma Goldman, and abolitionist August Bondi as well as Jewish Pioneers of the West such as Phillip Drachman here in Tucson, Otto Mears in Colorado, and the Jews of Tombstone (who made up around 10 percent of the population in the late 1800’s). We will discuss the circumstances that led these individuals, their ancestors, and others to come to the United States and the West.

  • The students in seventh grade learn about Jewish history, Israel, and the roots of anti-Semitism and the Holocaust. We will cover the role of prejudice and discrimination in the Nazis’ rise to power, the resistance movement, life in the ghettoes, and the concentration camps. We will look at the human-interest effects of the Holocaust and its impact on our lives today. Students will have opportunities to interview survivors from our very own community as part of their study of the Holocaust. Next, we will move on to the study of Israel as the Jewish State. Topics will be Israel as a "melting pot"- the variety of cultures, the military, technology, and other achievements in the last 72 years. Current events will be discussed as a regular part of each Sunday's lesson.

    7th Grade Calendar

  • The eighth-grade year marks the beginning of life-long Jewish education, carrying into high school and adult life. Eighth graders will learn about themselves as Jews within the context of the larger community. The focus will be on Comparative Religions, Tikkun Olam (Repairing the World), as well as using Jewish values in making decisions and facing challenges.

    Today's Jewish youth are looking for guidance and insight from their community about how to deal with many of the challenges they face at this stage of their lives. The Sacred Choices: Adolescent Relationships and Sexual Ethics curriculum helps students to develop a sense of personal sexual ethics, a spiritual framework for thinking Jewishly about their sexual choices. In a safe space, they will have the opportunity to talk openly and honestly about these issues. Within the context of the synagogue, our teens find a safe place for sharing and dialogue, they have adult role models whom they can trust for guidance, they find peers who face similar challenges, as well as finding a tradition that can teach and guide them in safe realistic directions.

    Confirmation may coincide with the Jewish holiday of Shavuot as it is a re-enactment of the children of Israel accepting the Torah at Sinai.

    This curriculum is designed to help students re-examine and define their relationship to Judaism. If you want to learn about Judaism as a grown up, then this year is for you.

ARJE Accreditation

The Kol Ami Religious School is proud to be accredited by the ARJE (The Association of Reform Jewish Educators). The accreditation process evaluated our program and concluded that our central purpose was Jewish learning. The ARJE defines Jewish education as preparing a lifelong learner for a committed and active Jewish life of worship, social action, celebration, and observance of mitzvot

Our organization also met the following accreditation goals: Shared Vision, Educational Leadership, Resources/Infrastructure, Lifelong Learning, Interaction Among Stakeholders, Culture and Climate, Content Expectations, Planned Curriculum, Effective Teaching/Programmatic Staff, and Self-Evaluation: A Commitment to Process. 

Register Now for

Religious School 23/24!

Madrichim is the Hebrew word for guides, derived from the word derech, which means route, path, or way of life. Madrichim are teenaged leaders acting as role models for students and as assistants to our teachers.

  • Education Director

    Rina was born and raised in Jerusalem, Israel. She served in the Israeli Defense Forces for two years, first as a soldier in the police service, and later as an assistant in the engineering force.

    Rina moved to Tucson in 1987 and her education career began at the Tucson J as a teacher in the early childhood program. Several years later she became a senior lead and developed a mentoring program for new teachers.

    She joined Or Chadash religious school in 2008 and was appointed to lead the joint religious school with Temple Emanu-El in 2021. As the Education Director at Kol Ami, she is responsible for the education of students in preschool through high school as well as the engagement of families with young children.

  • Rina holds an associate degree in early childhood education from the Arizona Central College, a Bachelor of Science in Education from Northern Arizona University, and an Executive Master’s in Jewish Educational Leadership from Hebrew Union College. She was recognized at the ARJE Conference and received the title of Reform Jewish Educator from the R.J.E. Title Granting Commission.

    She is a member of several professional organizations such as ARJE (Association of Reform Jewish Educators), NATA (National Association of Temple Administrators), and CEDS ( the local council of Jewish Education Directors).

  • Fall 2023

    Shalom Students and Families,

    Bruchim Ha-ba’im, ברוכים הבאיםWelcome! Thank you for choosing us as your spiritual community! You are about to embark on an exciting journey in Arizona’s only accredited religious school. We are honored to be working with you and your family.

    Hebrew School meets on Thursday afternoons (all students entering grades 3 through 7), between the hours of 4:15 to 6:00 p.m., and on Sundays between the hours of 9:30-noon (for students in grades Preschool through 8). Our B’nei Mitzvah students will be meeting on Saturday mornings 8:45-noon (instead of on Sundays). Students in grades 9 and 10, will begin on Sunday mornings from 9:00-10:00 followed by classroom assignments for those who are in the Madrichim (Teachers’ Aides) Program.

    Living in the digital era, we as educators continue to learn to enrich our students’ experiences in new ways. After offering hybrid learning for the last three years, we concluded that our students’ interests are best served either when they are all in person or all on Zoom. We recognize the need to continue to offer both options to accommodate the various schedules of our families. That is why beginning in the fall, Hebrew School will meet in person on Thursday afternoons. For our distance learning community, we will continue to offer the online Hebrew@home program on a different day of the week.

    We will also be integrating the use of cell phones (when appropriate), tablets, and other electronic devices into our program to ensure different learners can engage in ways that they were not able to do in the past. The staff will be using tools such as virtual display boards, Flipgrid, Nearpod, Padlet, Quizlet, online quiz games, and more to enhance our students’ learning experience. Our portable computer lab will allow us to enhance our teaching both in Hebrew and in the Religious School, and will ensure we can accommodate a larger number of students at any given time.

    This year, we are adopting the theme of מדור לדור Mi-dor l’dor (from generation to generation). We plan to start by bringing together various congregants to share their talents with our students and their parents. There will be opportunities for some ongoing electives that our students can participate in as well as events that will take place in the congregation to help strengthen our relationships and build a stronger community for years to come.

    Our partnership with the Yachdav Program in Israel will continue to take place this year. Students in various grades will be corresponding and meeting over zoom several times throughout the year.

    I invite each and every family to connect and with us and be involved in creating the best learning environment for our children.

    I look forward to working with you and your family,

    B’virkat Shalom,

    Rina Liebeskind Education Director

Rina Liebeskind

Education Director

Resources

Jewish Learning

  • Bimbam uses digital storytelling to teach about Judaism to learners of all ages.

  • Ji Tap: Create and play Jewish games.

  • My Jewish Learning: Geared toward all backgrounds and levels of knowledge, is all about empowering Jewish discovery for anyone interested in learning more.

  • PJ Library: Shares Jewish stories and resources for family-together time to help your family discuss our values and traditions.

  • Sefaria: Is assembling a free living library of Jewish texts and their interconnections in Hebrew and translation.

  • Shalom Sesame: From the creators of Sesame Street, Shalom Sesame is a cross-platform media initiative developed to introduce American children to Jewish culture, the Hebrew language, and the diversity of Israel.

Celebrate Shabbat