AP
Private and religious schools that don’t provide instruction substantially equivalent to New York state’s public schools will be threatened with loss of funding for textbooks, transportation and other services under new state Education Department rules released Tuesday.
The guidelines released Tuesday apply to all private schools but could have the greatest impact on ultra-Orthodox Jewish schools, called yeshivas, that critics have accused of providing little or no instruction in secular subjects like English and math.
“Although we are still reviewing NYSED’s guidelines, we have always believed that updated guidelines are an important step toward bringing about useful oversight of secular instruction at ultra-Orthodox yeshivas in New York,” said Naftuli Moster, the founder of Young Advocates for Fair Education, or YAFFED, a group that advocates for improved secular education at yeshivas.
The pro-yeshiva group Parents for Educational and Religious Liberty in Schools said it worries local school districts may use these guidelines “as license to intrude into the fundamental working and mission of religious schools.”
The group said in a statement, “Any attempt to impose uniformity on the almost 1,800 nonpublic schools in New York State, however well-intentioned, is only going to succeed if it appropriately accounts for the uniqueness of our schools and our educational system.”
Under the guidelines, staff members from local school districts will visit each nonpublic school once every five years and will determine whether the schools are providing enough instruction in required subjects including English, math, social studies and science.
A bill passed pushed through the state legislature last spring by state Sen. Simcha Felder, a Democrat who has caucused with Republicans, puts ultra-Orthodox yeshivas under the authority of the state rather than local education officials.
Yeshiva critics say the law waters down enforcement, but state Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia said local education officials will still be charged with visiting the schools that are subject to the so-called Felder amendment and will pass on their findings to the state.
Moster, whose group filed a federal lawsuit over the Felder amendment, said Tuesday’s announcement by the state Education Department won’t affect the lawsuit.
“While these revised guidelines do not address the unconstitutionality of the April 2018 Felder Amendment to the New York Compulsory Education Law, they are important to help continue the dialogue we must have to truly reform the system,” he said in a statement.
The initial round of school reviews will start in the 2018-2019 school year and will conclude by December 2020, Elisa said.
Schools that are flouting the state law requiring substantially equivalent instruction will be given a timeline to reach compliance, Elia said.
If a school is still not in compliance, government-funded services like textbooks and transportation could be withheld, and students would ultimately be directed to go to another school or be declared truant, Elia said.
The new state guidelines come as New York City officials have been bogged down in a protracted review of 30 yeshivas in the city. The city Department of Education says six high schools have refused to let its inspectors in.
Department spokesman Will Mantell said that in light of the new guidelines, city educators will prioritize visiting the schools that have blocked access and may make additional visits to the 24 schools that they have visited so far.
“We welcome the guidance and will work aggressively to implement it,” Mantell said.
Elia said “there obviously would be consequences” if schools don’t let local education officials in. “If access is not allowed, certainly a determination that a school is providing substantially equivalent instruction cannot be made,” she said.
Omg , if the education is so good why all CH public schools are F or D level ? We don’t have any good public school in our zip code …. I’m ok with a secular system in yeshiva but totally in different more intense format , mean more intense studying in less hours , because u can see that after graduation local public schools ,kids have zero chances for college degrees, …
And if all CH yeshiva will go to the local
Public schools where they will physically find a space ? Or classsee will be in the evening?
the rebbeh instituted oholei torah all taros hakodesh only with hebrew studies, if you don want that then send your child to the hundreds of other jewish schools
Hashem says that He doesn’t need Gan Eden nor the Beis Hamikdash, all he wants is to dwell in the mind of a Jewish child. And they take that mind and contaminate it with secular subjects! I agree . I wish some administers adapted this true attitude when making mandatory vaccines as a prerequisite to Yeshiva chinuch. Which is in compliance with NYS law. Yeshivas implement these unhalchiaic illogical policies not because they have to because they want to! If it’s out of town and there’s only one Yeshiva that has this policy the Yeshiva doesn’t seem terribly bothered that… Read more »
Someone should run for public office on the basis of making exempt from that portion of taxes that goes to fund public schools, all those who’s children do not attend public schools.
No. 5
Nobody is deprived them by not giving them secular studies at a young age. I think you would agree that Jewish children don’t need to learn other religions….there professional of every trade including doctors lawyers who are graduates of yeshivas who learned only limuday kodesh ALL DAY.
To comment four
It’s interesting that you write that it’s a shanda that some american born bochrim can’t read or write English with proficiency. You can look at the statistics on the NYSED website, In 2017 only about 25% of students in grades 3-8 in district 17 (public school district in crown heights) had grade-level proficiency in math and only 33.5% had grade-level proficiency in English. Out of the whole group of students 12% didn’t speak English as their first language. So we are doing just fine, thank you very much.
we’ll just quit paying property taxes to support our mosdos!
Sorry that makes no sense, you are connecting things that have non connection lol. How about the schools give the kids a basic education and call it a day?
Direct quote of the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s words in 1954. You’re welcome to disagree, but don’t call yourself a Lubavitcher. “They are afraid that when their child will ask directions, he will speak English with a Yiddish accent. Therefore, they teach him English and other secular subjects, contaminating his young mind. “The first three years of a child’s study are the foundation for all his future success, yet, they contaminate his early years with English, grammar, etc. Halevai adults wouldn’t know these things, certainly not children before nine or twelve years old. I would ask to delay it further, but “asking… Read more »
In answer to number 3, no one forced you to send ur kids to ot! They are following the rebbe guidelines
This sounds like the yevanim in our times 🙁
This issue has been ongoing between the DOE and Yeshivas for the last 3 years.
Things are coming to a head over the term in the law “Substantially equivalent” and what is deemed as such.
technically this will require 6 hours a day.
Much of it can be accomplished in conjunction with Hebrew studies / Kodesh but the reality is whether a school duck totally.
To do so will require divine assistance.
We just see how officials try disguising they’re antisemitism with “laws”.
They MUST get a secular education !!! Otherwise they become parasites and shnorers…………..
I don’t think they want all skl to learn just maths and English…..at least it may start that way. Dont start going down that problem road that all frum school in the UK are presently suffering from.
Parents don’t have the right to deprive their children of an education the same way they can’t deprive them of food or medical care.
It’s a shonde that there American born bochurim walking around who cannot read or write in English with proficiency.
What OT will do is raise tuition and say they lost government funding instead of doing what right and teaching basic English and math. Unfortunately the only solution is to send our kids to public school. So everything that say supposedly fighting for “Chinuch al taharas hakodesh” will not only be lost but parents will be forced to send the kids to schools that teach NO limudei kodesh. SAD!!!!
Maybe if the leaders of ch stop telling us to vote Democrat, this wouldn’t happen
Sounds familiar…….