Standards and Benchmarks Document
Standards and Benchmarks Document
Standards and Benchmarks Document
Standard 1
Students will become independent and literarily astute readers of the biblical
text in Hebrew.
PREAMBLE
Reading and understanding the TaNaKH in its original Hebrew allows its reader to experience
the religious power of the text, its poetic beauty and its literary nuances. As the great Hebrew
poet, Hayim Nachman Bialik, said, Reading a text in translation is like kissing a bride with the
veil still on.
The goal of this standard is to help students develop strategies for reading the text in Hebrew.
This standard lays out many of the linguistic and grammatical areas that students should
master, and it delineates access skills that students will need to read the text closely. It teaches
students how to do more than just read: it teaches students how to read closely, and with
sensitivity to the texts subtleties in short, how to be a literarily astute reader. Acquiring these
strategies and access skills will help students become independent and sensitive readers of the
biblical text; that is, Jews who are able to pick up a TaNaKH and read, understand and interpret
on their own.
The ultimate goal of comprehending the text is to allow for creation of meaning.
Comprehension is a means to an end, and the end is a relationship with the TaNaKH that needs
no intermediaries, no go-betweens, just the Jewish reader, the Hebrew book and no veil.
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STANDARD 1
GRADE LEVEL K-1 BENCHMARKS
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9
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STANDARD 1
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
1.10
Employs a variety of strategies and access skills when reading blocks of texts independently.
1.10a Understands verb prefixes and suffixes.
Suggested Examples:
, ,
1.10b Identifies roots in verbs and nouns.
Benchmark Genius: 4.18
1.10c
Ruth 1:20:
1.10g
1.10h Comprehends verses and short blocks of verses from the TaNaKH in Hebrew.
Sample Learning Activities:
Respond to comprehension questions about the plot line and sequence
of a story.
Given divided sections of a Torah portion, write captions.
3
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1.10i
1.10j
1.11
1.12
1.13
1.14
1.15
Cites text, including perek and pasuk, to prove a point, opinion or claim.
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STANDARD 1
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
1.16
1.16g
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1.17
1.18
1.19
1.20
1.21
1.22
Employs grammatical and literary skills when reading blocks of text independently.
1.23
Reads and comprehends longer blocks of verses from the TaNaKH in Hebrew.
Sample Learning Activities:
Respond to comprehension questions about the story line, sequence or laws of a given
biblical passage.
Find and cite verses to support a personal statement about the text.
Raise questions regarding an unusual syntactical, structural or grammatical structure.
Compare passages of two texts or within the same narrative for their similarities and
note differences in language or sequence.
Know how to divide a block of verses into natural divisions or, given natural divisions of
an unseen narrative, give each section a caption.
Use literary devices to support a search for meaning in the text.
1.24
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1.25
Understands that the verbal system in biblical Hebrew is different from modern Hebrew.
Sample Learning Activity:
Translate biblical Hebrew into modern; translate modern newspaper Hebrew article into
biblical prose.
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STANDARD 1
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
1.26
1.27
1.28
1.29
1.30
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1.31
1.32
1.33
1.34
1.35
1.36
1.37
Presents an interpretation of the text and uses literary understanding to critically evaluate
other readings of the same biblical passage.
Benchmark Genius: 2.31
Sample Learning Activity:
9
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1.38
10
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Standard 2
Students will be engaged in the learning of ancient, rabbinic and modern modes
of interpretation of the biblical text and will see themselves as a link in this
ongoing chain of interpretation.
PREAMBLE
As a multivalent and often ambiguous text, the TaNaKH invites us questioning and
interpretation. This standard encourages students to question and identify aspects of the text
that beg to be understood and interpreted. By way of studying traditional and contemporary
commentators interpretations as well as modern and ancient modes of interpretations,
students will develop the ability to apply interpretative methodologies to the study of TaNaKH.
The standard invites students to explore the multiple interpretations of the text and ultimately
offer and find textual support for their personal understanding of the biblical text.
11
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STANDARD 2
GRADE LEVEL K-2 BENCHMARKS
2.1
Gives examples of rabbis, teachers and other people who help explain the Torah.
Suggested Example:
There are people who interpreted the Torah a long time ago and people who still
interpret the Torah today.
Sample Learning Activities
List examples of people who help us understand the Torah.
Talk to guests invited to class to discuss the weekly Parashah; Rabbi, Cantor, Camp
Director, parents.
Discuss a Torah story with parents and bring feedback to class, demonstrating how
parents help us to understand the Torah.
2.2
2.3
2.4
Knows there are special stories midrashim that help explain and teach lessons based on
the Torahs words and narratives.
Suggested Resources:
Marc Gellman, Does God Have a Big Toe? Stories About Stories in the Bible. Sandy Sasso,
Noahs Wife; Gabrielle Kaplan, The Magic Tanach.
Sample Learning Activities:
Dramatize midrashim.
Create own midrash based on a selection of Torah.
12
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STANDARD 2
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
2.5
Demonstrates the understanding that some questions have more than one answer.
Benchmark Genius: 8.6, 8.10
Sample Learning Activities:
Give an example of a question from a class lesson that has more than one answer.
Offer alternative solutions to solve a problem offered by the teacher.
Present questions in a round-robin format to elicit answers from classmates.
2.6
2.7
Articulates that there are commentaries that provide interpretations of the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Midrash aggadah and midrash halakhah; Rashi, Rashbam.
Suggested Resources
Carol K. Ingall, Rashi and His World; The Melton Graded Curriculum; Harvey Fields,
Torah Commentary for Our Times.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain how a specific commentary interprets a given text.
Compare two commentaries on the same text.
Explain personal choice of commentary for a given text.
2.8
13
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Sample Learning Activities:
Suggest a connection between the midrash and the biblical text.
Find a textual connection between the midrash and the biblical text.
Give possible reasons why a midrash was written.
Create illustrated midrash or aggadah based on biblical verse(s).
Dramatize two midrashim for the same text.
2.9
2.10
14
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STANDARD 2
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
2.11
2.12
2.13
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2.14
2.15
Explains the basic principles of Parshanut Hamikra, rabbinic approaches to textual issues and
kshaiim in the TaNaKH.
Benchmark Genius: 1:18
Suggested Examples:
To the early rabbis, the writers of the Midrash, Mishnah and Talmud, and the medieval
commentators who followed the midrashic approach to commentary, the text of the
Torah is perfect, written by God and therefore must make sense, Ergo:
The text cannot have contradictions, e.g. two descriptions of creation.
The text cannot have unnecessary repetitions, e.g. narrative of Abrahams servant
looking for a wife and finding Rebecca, where details of events are repeated in the
retelling several times.
The text cannot be missing details, e.g. Cain and Abel (Genesis 4), Ruth 1 (ten years
later).
The text cannot have grammatical or syntactical mistakes.
Suggested Resources:
Joel Rosenberg, The Biblical Narrative and Edwad L. Greenstein, Medieval Bible
Commentaries in Back to the Sources, Barry Holtz, editor; Joel Lurie Grishaver, Teaching
Torah.
Sample Learning Activities:
Suggest a type of koshi/ a given text possesses, e.g. grammatical, syntactical,
unnecessary repetition, missing detail, apparent contradiction, ambiguity.
Demonstrate an understanding that one koshi/ can have a variety of responses.
2.16
16
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Sample Learning Activities:
Compare two commentaries on the same koshi and note differences.
Cite multiple interpretations in one commentary, e.g. Rashis dvar acher.
Write own commentary or resolution to an issue, including more than one possible
explanation.
Contribute a personal commentary to class: a Torat Hayyim or Mikraot Gidolot
page.
2.17
2.18
2.19
17
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STANDARD 2
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
2.20
2.21
2.22.
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Suggested Resources:
Yaakov Elman, Classic Rabbinic Interpretation in The Jewish Study Bible, Adele Berlin
and Marc Zvi, editors.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain how principle is used in midrash and to provide interpretation.
Given two or three verses with the same commentary, rewrite the verses using
principles but not terminology.
Make a poster of rabbinic hermeneutic principles.
2.23
2.24
Utilizes Mikraot Gedolot (Haketer edition recommended) or Torat Hayyim text as a tool for
interpretation.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify a textual issue or philosophical issue and cite two or three different
commentaries on the issue.
Highlight the main point(s) of each commentary and the interpretation of a given issue.
Evaluate commentaries; propose the best commentary.
2.25
Identifies the literary characteristics used in TaNaKH and uses them to construct an
independent interpretation of the text.
Benchmark Genius: 1.30
Suggested Examples:
Word play, understatement/overstatement, inclusion, chiasm, parallelism, repetitions,
leitwort, ambiguity, type scene.
Suggested Resources:
Joel Rosenberg, Bible: Bible Narrative in Back to the Sources; Robert Alter, The Art of
Biblical Narrative.
Sample Learning Activities:
Choose a narrative and write a personal interpretation based on literary analysis.
19
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2.26
2.27
2.28
2.29
Assesses the implications of different modern approaches to the reading of biblical text.
Benchmark Genius: 3.17
Suggested Examples:
Source criticism, feminist readings, literary criticism, reader response.
Suggested Resources:
20
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Etz Hayim Torah and Commentary, JPS; The Torah, A Modern Commentary, UAHC; Alice
Bach, Women in the Hebrew Bible; Adele Berlin and Marc Brettler, The Jewish Study
Bible: TaNaKH Translation, Torah, Neviim and Kethuvim; Everett Fox, The Five Books of
Moses; Tikva Frymer, Kensky, Reading Women in the Bible; Benjamin Scolnic, Modern
Methods of Bible Study in Etz Hayim Torah and Commentary; Shalom Spiegel, The Last
Trial; Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg, The Beginning of Desire: Reflections on the Book of
Genesis and the Particulars of Rapture: Reflections on Exodus
2.30
2.31
2.32
21
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Interdisciplinary unit with English class: analyze poetry or a selected novel with a
conscious effort to supply skills and/or compare themes acquired through TaNaKH
study.
Interdisciplinary unit with a Hebrew litereature class: identify biblical themes and
biblical echoes in modern Israeli music, poetry and literature.
22
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Standard 3
Students will appreciate TaNaKH as a multivocal text with a complex history of
development.
PREAMBLE
For modern Jews, the understanding that the TaNaKH is not monolithic and has a complex
history cannot be ignored. Whatever ones relationship is to the critical study of TaNaKH, one
must, at the very least, engage with the existence of these approaches. The methodology of
this standard is to root this engagement in the earliest experiences of children so that when
presented in later years with the critical approach in more detail, they are able to integrate it
into their understanding of Limmud Torah.
This standard raises complex and spiritually challenging issues such as, If we teach students to
view the TaNaKH critically, will they want to live their lives by it? If students dont believe that
the torah is written by God, why should they value it more than Shakespeare, Homer or any
other kind of literature?
The challenges posed by such questions are real and should not be under-estimated.
Nevertheless, we believe that critical approaches to the study of TaNaKH can and must be
taught in ways that provide spiritual nourishment and compelling connections to Judaism for
children.
This standard gives students more than a new way of reading texts. It gives them a new view of
Jewish history, a new understanding of the development of Jewish ideas and, in essence, a way
to appreciate our traditions enduring truths while maintaining integrity with the world of
academic scholarship.
23
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STANDARD 3
GRADE LEVEL K-5 BENCHMARKS
There are no benchmarks for the early grades in this standard. We believe that much of the challenge in
teaching towards this standard in the early years is the development of what we might term the protolanguage of the standard. That is, while it may be developmentally inappropriate to expect very young
children to look for sources in the Torah or compare texts in the light oftheir different historical
provenances, we can nevertheless begin to use language and ideas that build the groundwork for this
kind of engagement in later years.
The educational psychologist Jerome Bruner, in his famous book The Process of Education (1960),
argued that any subject can be taught effectively in some intellectually honest form to any child at any
stage of development.
Below, you will find some of the sentence-stems and suggested big ideas that can be used by an
elementary grades teacher in order to lay the foundations for this standardss benchmarks in grades 612.
Suggested Sentence-stems:
Why do you think the people who wrote the Torah thought.
When this story was written
What do you think the characters of the Torah were trying to tell us about[e.g. a character]?
24
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STANDARD 3
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
3.1
3.2
Compares and contrasts various and contradictory biblical responses to ultimate questions.
Benchmark Genius: 2.16
Suggested Examples:
Is God a majestic, awe-inspiring force of nature (Genesis 1), or the quiet voice of
conscience in our ears (Genesis 2-3)? To what extent should we erect barriers against
non-Jews (Deuteronomy 23:3) or allow them to enter our communities (Ruth)?
Sample Learning Activity:
Debate different biblical texts responses to ultimate questions.
3.3
3.4
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3.5
3.6
Compares and Contrasts Torah texts that present divergent ideas about the same issue.
Benchmark Genius: 2.16, 2.26
Suggested Examples:
The Decalogue Exodus 20:1-17 and Deuteronomy 5:6-18; Slavery Exodus 21,
Leviticus 25, Deuteronomy, 15; Holidays Leviticus 23, Numbers 28-29 and
Deuteronomy 16:1-17.
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine details of texts and note differences.
Explore reasons for repetitions.
Show how different passages of the Torah were formulated at different time periods.
26
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STANDARD 3
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
3.7
3.8
Knows that some biblical scholars have identified different sources in the TaNaKH as a
method for analyzing the composition of the TaNaKH.
Benchmark Genius: 6.22
Suggested Resources:
Richard Eliott Friedman, Who Wrote the Bible? and The Bible: With Sources Revealed;
Nachum Sarna, Understanding Genesis (Introduction); Joel Rosenberg, Biblical
Narrative in Back to the Sources, Barry Holtz, editor; Back to the Sources; Israel Knohl,
Sanctuary of Silence (first and last chapters); Benjamin Edidin Scolnic, Modern Methods
of Bible Study in Etz Hayim Torah Commentary; Ilana Pardes, Biography of Ancient
Israel.
Sample Learning Activities:
Read a secondary source on the documentary hypothesis and/or source criticism.
Articulate the theory and provide evidence used to support J, E, P and D as distinct
sources in the TaNaKH.
Examine characteristics, literary style, vocabulary and history of selected sources.
Compare biblical texts from different sections of the TaNaKH considered to be from the
same source, e.g. (D) Deuteronomy 31:24-29 to 2 Kings 22:8, the Scroll of Instruction in
Deuteronomy to the discovery of the scroll during King Joashs reign (D) Jeremiah and
Deuteronomy, (P) Ezekiel and Leviticus.
3.9
Evaluates various positions that explain how the TaNaKH is a product of different writers.
Benchmark Genius: 6.17
Suggested Examples:
Passover Exodus 12:9; Deuteronomy 16.7, 2; Chronicles 35:11-13; Slavery Exodus
21:2-6, 7-11; Leviticus 25:39-46; Deuteronomy 15:12-18; Collective and individual
27
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reward and punishment Exodus 34:6-7; Psalm 99:8; Deuteronomy 7:9-10; Psalm
103:8-10; Ezekiel 18.
Sample Learning Activities:
Trace changes in a given theme.
Compare differing views of a topic.
Explain how a response to an issue and/or event can be described differently.
Explain why all views were included in the TaNaKH.
3.10
Articulates why historical, authorial and literary claims made by biblical texts should not
always be taken at face value.
Suggested Examples:
Biblical texts were not necessarily written in the time period of the events they are
describing. Some biblical texts were ascribed to particular authors by later biblical
writers or editors, e.g., Psalms to King David, Song of Songs to Solomon, second and
third Isaiah to Isaiah and later chapters of Amos to Amos. Some biblical texts reflect
layers from earlier and later writers/editors, e.g. Amos, Isaiah 1-39 and 34-35 and
Leviticus 16:1-28 versus 16:29-34.
Suggested Resource:
Introductions ot the individual books of Prophets and Ketuvim in The Jewish Study Bible,
Adele Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler, editors.
Sample Learning Activities:
Determine tone, style and time frames in comparing Isaiah 6 to Isaiah 44.
Analyze a psalm without superscription for content, ideas, themes, etc. When presented
with a superscription, comment on the psalm for the suitability of subscription.
3.11
Recognizes that there are various methodologies for biblical text study.
Benchmark Genius: 2.21
Suggested Examples:
Parashanut Hamiqrah/medieval commentaries, source criticisms, literary approaches.
Suggested Resources:
Adele Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler, The Modern Study of the Bible and Barry D.
Wallfish, Medieval Jewish Interpretation in The Jewish Study Bible, edited by Adele
Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler; Robert Alter, The Art of Biblical Narrative.
Sample Learning Activities:
Research various interpretations of selected texts using different methodologies.
Analyze a selection from three points of view.
Posit a personal interpretation of selection and critique other views.
28
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3.12
Evaluates various theories and unanswered questions regarding canonization of the TaNaKH.
Suggested Examples:
TaNaKH was developed in stages. Canonization was a reaction to the destruction of the
Temple in 70 C.E. A book was chosen for canonization as a result of the communitys
views on sacredness and authority and inspiration. TaNaKH includes a wide variety of
genres as well as differing and contradictory traditions.
Suggested Resources:
Marc Zvi Brettler, The Canonization of the Bible in The Jewish Study Bible, edited by
Adele Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler.
3.13
3.14
Engages with Jewish scholarly writing that attempts to grapple with critical scholarship and
complex theological and philosophical ideas.
Benchmark Genius: 6.17, 6.22
Suggested Examples:
Neil Gillman, Sacred Fragments; Jonathan Wittenberg, The Three Pillars of Judaism;
Eliott Dorff, Conservative Judaism: From Our Ancestors to Our Descendents; Ellen
Frankel, The Five Books of Miriam: A Womens Commentary on the Torah.
Sample Learning Activities:
Write a journal entry or book review responding to a theologians position on critical
scholarship.
3.15
Articulates strategies for interpreting the text in the light of both its historical development
and its final redacted form.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 1 and 2-3, Genesis 37, Numbers 16.
Sample Learning Activity:
29
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3.16
Evaluates the position that traditional and modern critical methodologies are both valid forms
of interpretation.
Benchmark Genius: 6.23
Sample Learning Activities:
Reflect on purposes of specific interpretation and approach.
Journal a personal view of the understanding of TaNaKH.
3.17
Argues that the discussion of these issues is a central component of Jewish identity for the
modern Jew.
Benchmark Genius: 2.29
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze theological statements about Jewish identity from a variety of modern thinkers.
Write statements of personal theology that engage with these issues.
30
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Standard 4
Students will view the TaNaKH as the formative narrative of the Jewish people
past, present and future.
PREAMBLE
Throughout the ages, TaNaKH has served the Jewish people in many ways: a codex of law, a
shared history, a moral compass and a touchstone of national unity. In all regards, the TaNaKH
serves as the formative narrative of the people of Israel. A narrative is a master story, a set
of texts or traditions which form the basis for our understanding of reality and our values. A
formative narrative is the first place we go in order to understand why we are who we are.
Therefore, as students develop a working knowledge of the biblical narrative and explore the
central themes of the TaNaKH, they will be capable of drawing connections between the
biblical text, contemporary Judaism and their own lives. At the core of this study is the
opportunity for students to come to embrace the TaNaKH as their own formative narrative.
31
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STANDARD 4
GRADE LEVEL K-2 BENCHMARKS
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
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Adam and Eve (guardians of the world), Noah (righteous in his generation), Abraham
(belief in one God), Shifra and Puah (doing what is right).
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.8
Explains that the Jewish people read Torah portions regularly as part of a weekly (or triennial)
cycle.
Sample Curricular Ideas:
Create a Simhat Torah celebration. Teach an aspect of the weekly portion. Write the
weekly parasha on the classroom whiteboard.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify the sequencing of the Torah into weekly portions.
Link narratives to a specific book of the Torah.
Design parashat hashavua cards.
Illustrate/write about any portion of a narrative or verse of choosing.
Illustrate a special midrash for the Torah portion.
Place a symbol of parashat hashavua on a calendar
33
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STANDARD 4
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
4.9
Explores the themes of various biblical narratives and empathizes with the biblical characters
involved.
Benchmark Genius: 8.5
Sample Learning Activities:
Assume the role of a given character and explain his or her actions (for example, be
Sarah when she learns she is to have a child at an old age, be Moses when he sees the
burning bush, be Miriam at the sea).
Role-play, play charades, dress up as a biblical figure.
Create a storyboard for a biblical character.
4.10
4.11
4.12
4.13
Increases specificity and detail of personalities, themes and events of Torah narratives.
Suggested Examples:
34
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Dilemmas, e.g., Sarah and Hagar, Jacob and the birthright, Moses and the Egyptian,
positive and negative traits of a biblical personality.
4.14
4.15
4.16
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4.17
4.18
Connects Modern Hebrew words to biblical verses containing those same words or roots.
Benchmark Genius: 1.10b
Suggested Examples:
My bayit is where I live and the mishkan was Gods bayit, I do work with my yad
and God does work with his yad (straightforward); Moses buried the Egyptian in the
chol, but today we bury our feet in the chol on Tel Aviv beach (more complex);
Moses asked Pharaoh to shalach his people, but today the mischlachat comes to
camp (very complex).
Suggested Learning Activity:
Give students a biblical vese and ask them to suggest modern uses of the word or root.
36
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STANDARD 4
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
4.19
Traces events of the narrative with greater intensity, focusing on details and complex themes.
Suggested Examples:
Covenant, emergence of a people from slavery to freedom, revelation at Sinai, acts of
rebellion, ongoing relationship of God to Israel, centrality of entering the land of Israel,
Israels election.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify a recurring central theme in a new narrative.
Compare the theme in a new narrative to the theme in a narrative previously learned.
Discern conflicts between the ideal and the narrative.
Keep a journal of a central theme, e.g. , acts of rebellion.
4.20
Analyzes the characters in the TaNaKH, focusing on their motivation and personality.
Benchmarks Genius: 8.5, 8.6, 8.7
Suggested Examples:
Jacobs deceit, Joseph and his brothers, Joseph and Potifars wife, Moses as a leader,
Korachs rebellion, Miriam and Aarons punishment for being critical of Moses, Pinchas
zeal, Sauls rage, Davids usurpation of power, Solomons greed.
Suggested Resources:
Peter Pitzele, Scripture Windows and Our Fathers Wells: A Personal Encounter With the
Myths of Genesis; Ilana Pardes, Biography of Ancient Israel.
Sample Learning Activities:
Lists three characteristics that exemplify a given character.
Bring proof from verses to support claims.
Explore issues of why the Torah represents human foibles.
4.21
Recognizes interweaving of biblical themes and passages throughout the siddur and other
later Jewish and Israeli texts.
Suggested Examples:
Creation, redemption, revelation, covenant.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated with the study of tefillot, rabbinics and modern Hebrew literature.
Suggested Resource:
Franz Rosenzweig, The Star of Redemption.
Sample Learning Activities:
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4.22
Find references to a central biblical theme when given a prayer to analyze. Explore the
significance of the biblical passages of Shma (Deut. 6:4-9), vHaya im Shamoah (Deut
11:13-21) and vaYomer (Num. 15:37-41) as part of the set prayer/ .
Write a personal prayer based on a given theme.
Create a photo journal of phrases from the siddur that reflect creation/ .
4.23
4.24
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4.25
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STANDARD 4
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
4.26
4.27
4.28
Compares the Torahs theologies and philosophies to their development in later Jewish texts.
Suggested Resource:
Judith Hauptman, Rereading the Rabbis.
Sample Learning Activity:
Roleplay a biblical Israelite thrust forward in time to later Judaism (a la Midrash of
Moshe and Akiva).
4.29
Traces the development of Covenant (Brit) throughout the TaNaKH and later Judaism.
Benchmark Genius: 7.12, 7.20
Sample Learning Activities:
Connect covenant to divine election.
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4.30
Relates the historical national memory of having been strangers in the land of Egypt to the
development of Jewish life and self-understanding.
Benchmark Genius: 8.26
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 22:20-23, 23:9, Leviticus 19:34
Sample Learning Activities:
Locate and cite biblical sources of the concept.
Analyze for you were strangers in the land of Egypt as a generative Jewish value.
Examine and compare implications of the concept of the Israelites or the Jewish people
as a landless people and as a sovereign nation.
Recognize the centrality of the concept in the Haggadah and siddur.
Explore the concept of empathy: If I were to see myself coming out of Egypt, then I
would
Identify other Torah values related to empathy, kindness and the role of memory.
4.31
Responds personally to the notion that law has been a central element of the Jewish master
story from the biblical narrative through later Judaism.
Benchmark Genius: 6:18, 7.21, 8.22
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 9, Noachide Laws, Exodus 19ff The Decalogue and Mishpatim, Book of
Numbers, interweaving law and narratives, Deuteronomy, emphasis on observing laws,
midrash halakhah.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated with rabbinics.
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze the nature of the revelation at Sinai () .
Examine the relationship of the narrative to the law.
Recognize the centrality of biblical law in the study of midrash halakhah, Mishnah and
Talmud.
4.32
41
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The JPS Bible Commentary Esther, commentary by Adele Berlin, Reading Ruth, edited by
Judith Kates and Gail Reimer.
4.33
4.34
4.35
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Robert Alter, Literary Guide to the Bible, Joel Rosenberg, The Biblical Narrative, Back
to the Sources, edited by Barry Holtz.
4.36
4.37
4.38
Interprets the relationship between modern Hebrew and Israeli literature and culture and
their biblical grounding.
Suggested Examples:
T Carmi, The Penguin Book of Hebrew Verse; J. Zipperstein, Elusive Prophet: Ahad Haam
and the Origins of Zionism; Yitzchak Rabin, Speech on signing the Frameworks of
Peace, September 1993; Modern Israeli songs and writings.
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine aspects of modern Israeli identity that are rooted in a perception of TaNaKH.
Identify and understand biblical references and allusions in modern Hebrew literature
and poetry, Jewish thought and speeches.
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Standard 5
Students will, through the study of TaNaKH, understand and value that the Land
of Israel informs and shapes the historical, theological and sociological
experiences of the Jewish people.
PREAMBLE
The Land of Israel plays a central role in biblical law, narrative and poetry in the TaNaKH and for
the development of Judaism, Jewish identity and the Jewish people. A comprehensive study of
TaNaKH includes an exploration of the role that the Land of Israel plays in the ongoing
development of the Jewish people and their nation-state. Themes that inform such an
exploration include: brit, sacred space, exile and return, connections to the Land and Zionism
and the modern State of Israel. Approaching these ideas through the study of TaNaKH will elp
students make personal connections with the Land of Israel.
The politicized complexity of modern Israel can, for some Jews, be a disincentive to engage with
the TaNaKH through this standard. In this standard, you will find a variety of benchmarks, some
of which offer more straightforward understandings to the connection between TaNaKH and
the Land of Israel and some of which offer significant and powerful opportunities for honest
and critical engagement, at age-appropriate levels, with those two highly complex subject
matters.
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STANDARD 5
GRADE LEVEL K-2 BENCHMARKS
5.1
Explains that the Land of Israel was a special place for the Israelites in the TaNaKH and is still a
special place for Jewish people today.
Suggested Resources:
Genesis 12:1-5, Lech-lecha, Genesis 24, Abrahams instructions to a servant to find Isaac
a wife; Exodus story; songs and pictures about modern Israel; teachers or parents who
come from Israel; Shalom Sesame.
Sample Learning Activities:
Express wasy that the Land of Israel is special.
Create a scrapbook, draw pictures, contribute to a class montage.
Sing songs based on TaNaKH text about the land of Israel: Uufaratza, Eretz Zavat
Halav, Lechi Lach.
Learn Hatikvah and its significance to the Jewish people.
5.2
Explains that the Torah tells of the brit that God made with Abraham and Abrahams family to
give them the Land of Israel.
Suggested Resource:
Debbie Friedman Lechi Lach (And You Shall Be a Blessing) on CD.
Sample Learning Activities:
Give examples of promises between two people.
Role-play Genesis 12: Act out the story from the TaNaKH, respond to Gods promise, e.g.
ask, You are going to Canaan. What are you going to bring?
5.3
Explains that even in Ancient times, the Land of Israel was also special for many other people.
Suggested Examples:
Phoenician and Assyrian traders, Canaanite farmers.
Sample Learning Activities:
Role-play conversations between Abraham and people he meets while wandering
through the Land of Israel.
5.4
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Suggested Resources:
Matt Biers-Ariel, The Seven Species, Stories and Recipes Inspired by the Foods of the
Bible, UAHC Press; Azaria Alon, The Natural History of the Land of the Bible.
Sample Learning Activities:
Design a poster, graphic or shadowbox to display the seven species.
Prepare special foods with the species.
Create a story about the Land of Israel to accompany the recipe.
Illustrate a land flowing with milk and honey/ .
5.5
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STANDARD 5
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
5.6
Connects the /brit between God and Abraham to the Land of Israel.
Benchmark Genius: 7.12
Suggested Examples:
Walking the land and placing altars, Genesis 12, 13:17-18; purchasing the cave of the
Machpela, Genesis 23.
Sample Learning Activities:
Note the differences between the covenant with Noah and the covenant with Abraham.
Analyze the various ways to show possession of the territory as seen in the narratives
about Abraham.
Keep an itinerary of places and events of Abrahams journey.
5.7
5.8
Associates the sacredness of space in the Torah with places of interactions with God.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 12:8, 13:18, 15, 21:33, 22:14, Abrahams altars; Genesis 15, Hagar and Beerlahai-roi; Genesis 21:22, Isaacs altar; Genesis 28:10-16; 32:25-33, Jacobs ladder and
struggle with the angel; Exodus 3, Moses and the burning bush; Exodus 20, Har Sinai;
Exodus-27, Mishkan.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify sacred places in the TaNaKH.
Explain why the Land of Israel is called .
Describe what it feels like to be in a sacred place.
Design a poster Achen yesh adonai bamakom hazeh vanochi lo yadati. ( '
)
5.9
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Suggested Examples:
Yam haMeleach, Sodom, Genesis 14; Moriah, Beer Sheva, Genesis 21:15; Shchem,
Hevron, Maarat haMachpela, Genesis 24; Yama, Negba, Tzafona, Kedmah, Genesis
28:14.
Sample Learning Activities:
Place the Negev, Yamah-Negbah-Tzafonah-Kedmah, Moriah, Beer Sheva, Shchem,
Hevron and Yam HaMelach in the correct location on a map of the
patriarchal/matriarchal period.
Indicate the journey of Abraham and Sarah, Moses and other biblical characters on the
map.
Write or paste a relevant verse to a map.
Make an individual map of the biblical time period.
5.10
5.11
Connects the concept of living in the Land of Israel today to examples in the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Abraham and Sarah, Jacob, Moses, Josephs bones, Naomi, the Israelites all desired to
go or return to the Land.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated into the Israel Curriculum.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify aliyah as a positive and potential component of Jewish identity as illustrated in
the Torah.
Role-play biblical characters about feelings about Israel.
Create slogans for making aliyah.
Communicate with new olim (via email or teleconference).
Discuss what it would be like to make aliyah.
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STANDARD 5
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
5.13
Explains what biblical agricultural laws tell about Israelite society in the Land of Israel.
Suggested Examples:
Mitzvot shtluyiot baretz/ e.g., treatment of strangers, orphans,
widows, poor people, Deuteronomy 15; peah, leket, shichchah, Leviticus 19:9,
Deuteronomy 5:12-15; shnat haYovel, Leviticus 25:15; shemitah, Leviticus 2.
Sample Learning Activities:
Evaluate how mitzvot relating to the Land of Israel help create a sacred place.
Connect commandments/mitzvoth associated with having the Land with social
responsibilities and concern for the environment.
Identify one biblical law relating to the Land and apply it to a modern environmental
issue.
Research organizations in Israel today that address issues associated with mitzvoth
regarding the Land.
Create an ad campaign on how to protect the Land.
5.14
Identifies the role that the Land of Israel plays in the ongoing identity formation of the Jewish
people.
Benchmark Genius: 4:21 and passim
Suggested Examples:
Numbers, wanderings in the desert and getting to the Land; Deuteronomy, Mosess plea
to see the Land, Naomi, Esther, exile of the two kingdoms the impact of galut (exile).
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze narratives for the poignancy of having the Land or being landless.
Discuss what it means to have a covenant and not have the Land.
Describe the universal desire for nationalism and relate this to the biblical roots of
modern Zionism.
Defend Mosess case to enter the Land.
Plan and participate in a United Nations convention or World Zionist Congress.
Draw political cartoons.
5.15
Explores the tension between the importance of the land of Israel and other central mitzvoth
or values to the Jewish people.
Benchmark Genius: 7.26 and passim
Suggested Examples:
Deuteronomy 8:19-20, 11:13-17, 28:15-68.
Sample Learning Activity:
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5.16
Explores the complex questions around the displacement of other nations in order to make
room for the Israelites legitimate need for a land of their own.
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 23:27-33, Deuteronomy 7:1-5.
Sample Learning Activity:
Do a bibliodrama exploring Abrahams feelings about his need for a home along with a
Canaanite farmers feelings about his connection to the land.
5.17
Recognizes that the notion of exile and return begins in the biblical text.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 12, tension between lech-lecha and Abrahams descent to Egypt; Genesis 24:19, Abrahams search for Isaacs wife, Genesis 28:10-20, Gods assurance to Jacob to
return to the Land; Genesis 28:28-31, Jacobs request to be buried in the Land; Genesis
38-50, Exodus 13:15, Joseph, from exile to diaspora to burial; Numbers 32:1-11, tribes
on the east side of the Jordan.
Sample Learning Activity:
Identify two biblical figures whose actions are conflicted regarding exile and living in the
Land.
Interview a biblical character living in galut, e.g., Abraham, Sarah, Joseph, Esther,
Naomi.
Take a position in Four Corners on the topic.
5.18
Gives examples of how biblical archaeology can help illuminate aspects of the biblical era.
Suggested Examples:
Hazor, Joshua 11, Judges 4, Meggido, I Kings.
Suggested Resources:
Lee Levine, Biblical Archeology, Etz Haim Torah and Commentary; The Ancient Near
East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures, Volume I, edited by James B. Pritchard.
Suggested Website Resources:
The Israel Museum website, Archeology Wing: The Jewish Virtual Library, Virtual Israel
Experience, Archeology Section, Sponsored by the Israel Foreign Ministry, An
American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise.
Sample Learning Activities:
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5.19
Bring examples from archeology that illuminate aspects of daily life in the Land of Israel
during biblical times.
Examine archeological finds and their impact on our understanding of biblical text.
Write an editorial of a biblical event based on an arechological find and a second based
on biblical text.
5.20
Explores the tension between the need for a home for the Jewish people and the
perspectives of others who might also call that place home.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 5:19, Deuteronomy 7:1-11, Book of Joshua, Book of Judges.
Sample Learning Activities:
Raise questions regarding relationships to the inhabitants of the Land in light of a
great nation with just laws.
Ask the question: Could Abraham have established a monotheistic Israelite culture if
there were pagan Canaanites still all over the Land?
Role-play a position in a class town hall meeting.
5.21
Demonstrates how and why the map of biblical Israel evolved over biblical time.
Suggested Examples:
The periods of Abraham, Joshua, Judges, David, Solomon, Split Kingdoms, 722 BCE and
586 BCE, Ezra-Nehemiah; Compare Genesis 15:18 and Deuteronomy 1:6-8 with
Numbers 33-34.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify the various borders of the Land of Israel on a map.
Discuss the impact of changing the borders on the people living in and out of the Land of
Israel.
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Create a PowerPoint or other form of presentation with the changing map of the
different time periods.
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STANDARD 5
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
5.22
Understands the significance of the use of nature in biblical poetry and metaphor.
Suggested Examples:
Metaphors and similies relating to the Land of Israel and its flora, fauna and topography.
I Samuel 2:21 O hills of Gilboa, Let there be no dew or rain on you.
I Kings 4:33 from the cedar treet that is in Lebanon even to the hyssop that springs
from the wall.
Song of Songs 2:1 I am the Rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.
Isaiah 35:1 The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them, the desert
shall rejoice.
Isaiah 11:6 The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, the leopard lie down with the kid: the
calf, the beast of pray and the fatling together.
Joel 2:22 Fig tree and vine have yielded their strengths.
Suggested Resource:
Azaria Alon, The Natural History of the Land of the Bible.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain a biblical reference and its connection to the Land of Israel.
Suggest a rationale for the use of a particular allusion to nature.
5.23
Explores the connection between exile form the Land of Israel and the transition to a textbased identity.
Suggested Examples:
Nehemiah 9, move from centralized sacrificial worship to diffuse prayer, pilgrimage
festivals celebrated in homes and synagogues, fulfillment of laws connected to the Land
replaced with the study of those laws, scroll of Esther.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain how exile from the Ladn created a need for new rituals.
Trace a biblical ritual from its Land-based origins to text-based observance, e.g.,
sacrifices, Pesah observance.
Analyze the use of writings in exilic works.
5.24
Discuss the development of biblical theology relating to exile and return to the Land.
Suggested Examples:
Ruth, Isaiah 11, Jeremiah 31, Ezekiel 11:14-21, 18, Hosea 14.
Suggested Resources:
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5.25
Evaluates the tension between biblical texts advocating holy place and biblical texts
advocating holy time.
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 20:8-11 versus Deuteronomy 13:8-19, Leviticus 23 versus texts on the
Tabernacle.
Suggested Resources:
Abraham Joshua Heschel, The Sabbath: an Island in Time and Israel: An Echo of Eternity.
Sample Learning Activity:
Categorize passages from the TaNaKH, Rabbinic Literature or the Siddur in terms of the
emphasis on time versus place.
5.27
Examines the relationship between the TaNaKH and the history and literature of Zionism and
the State of Israel.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be combined with a History of Zionism course.
Suggested Resources:
Megillat Haatzmaut, Theodore Herzl and the Uganda Plan; A.D. Gordon; Rav Kook.
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze different phases of biblical Israels national development and the political
anthropological and historical circumstances that influenced particular developments.
Select a modern Israeli political, literary or religious text, personality, music or issue and
analyze the e extent to which the item of interest is rooted in biblical themes.
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Standard 6
Students will develop an appreciation for the sacredness of the TaNaKH as the
primary record of the meeting between God and the people of Israel and as an
essential text through which Jews continue to grapple with theological, spiritual
and existential questions.
PREAMBLE
What is God? How do I understand my relationship with the natural world? How should I
interact with others, be they strangers or significant people in my life? How do I understand my
life in meaningful ways? These are just some of the profound theological, spiritual and
existential questions that the reflective human being grapples with. Engaging with the biblical
text by definition includes engaging with theological and spiritual concerns: what it means to be
created in Gods image, the sacredness of our biblical texts: the role of Torah study today as
an avenue for meeting with God, and the multiple ways to describe, know and relate to God.
The biblical text, as the meeting place between humanity and God, is not just a theological
treatise. It is a resource and springboard for our most profound ultimate questions.
Exploration of the theological, ritual and existential aspects of the TaNaKH will help students to
develop their own personal theologies. It will also help them explore Jewish responses to the
ultimate questions of life, the universe and everything.
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STANDARD 6
K-2 BENCHMARKS
6.1
Demonstrates and articulates the need for respectful behaviors toward the sefer Torah.
Benchmark Genius: 8.1
Suggested Examples:
Stands when the ark is open, kisses the Torah as it passes, gets ready to study Torah in a
respectful way, understands that a humash and a TaNaKH do not go directly on the
floor.
Sample Learning Activities:
Actively participate in teacher-generated, child-friendly Torah rituals.
Regularly demonstrate respect for the Torah and ritual objects that contain sections of
the Torah, e.g., mezuzot, tefillin, humashim, siddurim.
6.2
Knows the appropriate berakhot and procedures for learning and reading the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Laasok bedivrei Torah; Haarev-na; berakhot for aliyah to the Torah.
6.3
Understands that the torah has always been central to Jewish life.
Benchmark Genius: 4.8, 8.4
Suggested Curricular Activities:
Invite a Torah scribe/ to demonstrate how a Torah is written and made and how
verses from the Torah are found in mezuzot and tefillin, teach students to chant
selected verses of Torah sections being taught, create a Torah bulletin board.
Sample Learning Activities:
Demonstrate an awareness of everyday symbols of Torah.
Design a mezuzah for personal use.
Contribute to a torah bulletin board.
6.4
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Suggested Resource:
Sandy Sasso, In Gods Name.
Sample Learning Activity:
Recognize the various biblical names of God and the different meanings they convey.
6.5
Summarizes and embellishes dialogues between God and a variety of Genesis and Exodus
personalities.
Benchmark Genius: 2.2
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 2, Adam and Eve; Genesis 4, Cain and Abel; Genesis 6-9, Noah; Genesis 12ff,
Abraham; Genesis 18, Sarah; Genesis 28, Jacob; Exodus 1, Shifrah and Puah; Exodus 3ff,
Moses, Zipporah.
Sample Learning Activities:
Develop and participate in role-playing scenarios or similar performances that
demonstrate an understanding of the relevant texts.
Role-play; dress up as a biblical figure.
Illustrate dialogues.
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STANDARD 6
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
6.6
Applies the notion that all people are created btzelem Elohim to real-life situations which
could be transformed through the conviction of human sacredness.
Benchmark Genius: 8.12
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 1:27, 9:6
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify the unique nature of each individual and self as a manifestation of Gods image
imprinted upon each person.
Create a collage of diverse images of people.
Ask students to write on the topic what makes me unique.
Demonstrate kindnesses to others.
6.7
Gives examples from the range of mitzvoth in the Torah that expand the concept of btzelem
Elohim.
Benchmark Genius 7.7
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 2:1-3, Shabbat; Genesis 18, visiting the sick/ , welcoming guests/
; Leviticus 19, Holiness Code.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain the connection between btzelem Elohim and the performance of certain
mitzvoth.
Display respectful behaviors towards others.
6.8
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6.9
6.10
6.11
Compares the differeing evolving concepts of God that people associate with biblical texts.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 2, Adams transitional view of God from creator to responsibility-giver, Genesis
18:25, Abrahams use of judge/ ;Genesis 16:13, Hagars use of God of seeing or
seeing me/ ; Genesis 31:42, Jacobs use of Fear of Isaac/ in
conversation with Laban; Exodus 3, Gods conversation with Moses, God of your
ancestors/ -, and I will be what I will be/ .
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain how biblical characters have evolving relationships with God.
Compare different biblical characters experiences with God, e.g., Adam and Eve, Cain
and Abel, Isaac and Jacob, Abraham and Sarah, Joseph and Jacob.
Engage in conversation about differing views of God.
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6.12
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STANDARD 6
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
6.13
Explores why the text might have chosen to use particular metaphors for God and/or for
Gods presence in particular contexts.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 18:25 and Psalms 7:12, judge; Exodus 3:2, burning bush; Exodus 13:12,
cloud/fire; Exodus 15:13, warrior; Exodus 19:4, eagles wings; Joshua 3:11,
Master; Isaiah 45:7, Creator; I Samuel 1:11, hosts.
Sample Learning Activities:
List the attributes of a metaphor and interpret how the text uses the metaphor to
understand God.
Select two or more texts with one or more metaphors of God and suggest why the
metaphors differ.
6.14
Constructs a personal narrative for the place of Torah study in post-bar/bat mitzvah Jewish
identity.
Benchmark Genius: 7.19
Sample Learning Activities:
Recognize that the study of Torah deals with theological and spiritual issues.
Understand the parashiyot of Shma in relationship to the mitzvah of limmud Torah.
Keep a journal responding to the impact of limmud Torah on the students Jewish
practice.
6.15
Grapples with the both the inspiring and the troubling aspects of the idea that God speaks.
Sample Learning Activities:
Write a short exploratory essay considering why the text says that God speaks.
Share personal responses to God speaks.
6.16
Analyzes how various human/divine dialogues shed light on the divine/human relationship.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 2, Adam and Eve; Genesis 4, Cain; Genesis 6-9, Noah; Genesis 12, Abraham;
Genesis 18, Sarah; Genesis 28, Jacob; Exodus 3ff, Moses; Numbers 12, Miriam and
Aaron.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain that human/divine interactions in the Torah impact our understanding of God
and the very nature of the human/divine relationship.
Compare episodes of a biblical passage before and after an encounter with God.
Keep a journal or chronicle a personal life-changing experience.
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6.17
6.18
Examines how biblical law influences the theological and spiritual experiences of the Jewish
people.
Benchmark Genius: 4.31
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 20-24, Yitro, Mishpatim; Leviticus 1-6, cult law; Leviticus 19, Holiness Code;
Deuteronomy 13ff.
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify legal passages in the TaNaKH and consider their spiritual impact on biblical
Israel.
Understand the centrality of law in Gods relationship to the Jewish people.
Analyze how legal passages serve as the basis for the later development of the Jewish
legal system.
6.19
Explores the varying views of God in the books of the Early Prophets (Neviim Rishonim) and
selected Megilot.
Suggested Examples:
Early prophets, Books of Joshua, Judges, I and II Samuel, I and II Kings; Megillat Esther;
Megillat Ruth.
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6.20
6.21
Applies the notion of kedushah in its various contexts to various contemporary situations.
Benchmark Genius: 8.17
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 2:1-3, sacred time (Shabbat); Exodus 19, Holy Pople/ ; Leviticus 19:2,
God/ ; Exodus 25:8, Sacred space/ .
Suggested Sample Activities:
Developing a class tzedakah or community service project; planning an environmental
project, e.g., Adopt-a-Spot, helping students express awe and wonder, becoming the
class that cares, creating sacred space, creating sacred time, e.g., Shabbat, holidays.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated with the study of human sexuality and/or a unit on drug education.
Sample Learning Activities:
Generate a list of actions in the students own lives and in the lives of those around
them that reflect, You shall be holy for I am holy/ .
Reflect upon how the students actions are rooted in mitzvoth that are part of an
understanding of the kedushah.
Identify three biblical texts in which the concept of kedushah is central to the theme of
the text.
Explain what is holy about Shabbat, the Land of Israel, the Jewish people and God.
Illustrate activities for a week day and for Shabbat.
Write an essay on the topic Making Saturday into Shabbat.
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STANDARD 6
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
6.22
6.23
6.24
Uses the biblical text as a resource and springboard for the discussion of issues of ultimate
concern.
Benchmark Genius: 3.1, 3.13, 8.22
Suggested Examples:
Origins of the basic rules of society, insights into human behavior, issues of faith, hope
and despair, life and death, radical amazement, treatment of the other.
Suggested Resource:
Michael Rosenak, Commandments and Concerns, chapter 6.
Sample Learning Activity:
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6.25
Consider an issue of ultimate concern and demonstrate how the TaNaKH gives us
insights and helps us think in a more sophisticated way about the issue.
6.26
6.27
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6.28
Proposes personal responses to the multiple and complex questions around being a chosen
people.
Benchmark Genius: 2.26
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 19:4-5, 24:7-8, Deuteronomy 26:17, the relationship of election to covenant.
Suggested Resource:
Rebecca Eugene Borowitz, Liberal Judaism.
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine the relationship of election to covenant.
Consider an issue in regard to all created in Gods image.
Explore issues of chosen-ness, e.g., Borowitzs chosen for superiority, chosen for
responsibility, chosen to suffer.
Debate the concept of chosen-ness in todays world.
6.29
Considers how different genres of literature in the TaNaKH influence thinking about
divine/human and human/human relationships.
Benchmark Genius: 1.33
Suggested Examples:
Narrative, poetic, legal and prophetic sections as well as wisdom literature offer various
understandings of the divine/human relationship.
Sample Learning Activity:
Analyze the variety of theological, spiritual and existential modes that are found in
various genres of biblical literature.
6.30
Views the TaNaKH as a source for developing and articulating a personal theology.
Benchmark Genius: 3.13, 7.25
Sample Learning Activities:
Identify elements of TaNaKH that are critical to developing a personal philosophy.
Develop and articulate a personal theology using biblical, rabbinic and modern sources.
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Standard 7
Students will understand, through the study of TaNaKH and its interpretations, the role of
mitzvot in the shaping of the ethical character and religious practices of the individual and the
Jewish people.
PREAMBLE
Judaism is commonly understood as a religion of deed that finds its origins in the Torah. The
relationship between contemporary Jewish religious practice and biblical religion is a complex
one. This standard offers students the opportunities to learn about the connections between
contemporary mitzvah practices, traditional norms of rabbinic practice and their biblical origins.
Included in this standard are benchmarks that deal with the place of mitzvot in the covenant
with God, the relationship of ritual and ethical laws, the centrality of law, the identification of
the biblical origins of current-day mitzvot and the evolution of mitzvah practice.
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STANDARD 7
GRADE LEVEL K-2 BENCHMARKS
7.1
Understands that the Torah tells of the Jewish peoples relationship with God, which includes
the fulfillment of mitzvot.
Suggested Examples:
Giving of the law, Exodus 19-20; Shma, Deuteronomy 6:4-9; Shabbat; holidays; Torah
study; how one treats another; how one acts.
Suggested Resource:
Bradley Artson, Its a Mitzvah.
7.2
Uses certain key phrases that denote ethical and ritual mitzvot.
Suggested Examples:
Remember the Sabbath () .
Honor your father and mother () .
Love your fellow as yourself () .
Seven days you shall eat matzot. () .
You shall teach your children () .
7.3
Identifies mitzvot derived from the narrative of the weekly Torah portion.
Suggested Examples:
Shabbat, Genesis 2:1-3; protecting the environment () , Genesis 2:15; belief
in one God, Genesis 12; visiting the sick () , welcoming guests (
), pursuing peace and justice ( -) , Genesis 13 and 18;
humane treatment of animals () , Genesis 21:47; kashrut, Genesis 32:2232.
7.4
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7.5
Explains that certain daily mitzvot and rituals originate in the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Tzedakah, Leviticus 19:9, Deuteronomy 15:8; limmud Torah; teffillin and mezuzah,
Deuteronomy 6:8-9; tzitzit, Numbers 15:38-39; kashrut, Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy
13.
Sample Learning Activities:
Contribute to a class mural of daily mitzvot.
Explain the symbolism of mezuzah, tefillin and tzitzit.
Create a special tzedakah campaign.
7.6
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STANDARD 7
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
7.7
Categorizes diversely different mitzvot according to their respective deeds and behaviors.
Benchmark Genius: 6.7
Suggested Examples:
Do not wrong anyone in speech. (Lev. 25:17) ()
Honor the old and wise (Lev.19:32) ()
Do not place a stumbling block before the blind. (Lev. 19:14) ()
Open your hand to your fellow person who is poor. (Deut. 16:11) (
)
Rejoice in your festivals. (Deut 16:14) ()
Write them on the mezuzot upon your doorposts and gates. (Deut 6:9) (
)
You shall have no other Gods (Exod. 2:2) ()
Sample Learning Activities:
Categorize a list of mitzvot into holiday, Shabbat, treatment of others, kashrut, ecology
and limmud Torah categories.
Write and act in a skit based on a mitzvah.
Illustrate or make a collage of mitzvot.
7.8
7.9
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7.10
Give examples of mitzvot whose observance today has evolved since biblical times.
Benchmark Genius: 4.15
Suggested Examples:
Rabbis of the Mishnah, Talmud and beyond examined the words of the Torah and wrote
laws as to how to fulfill the mitzvot, e.g., developed the seder from the biblical
commandment for Passover sacrifice; set times when to recite the Shma; interpreted
dont cook a kid in its mothers milk to mean separating milk from meat no eating,
cooking or deriving any pleasure from the simultaneous use of milk and meat.
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine how the mitzvah is written in the Torah.
Note similarities and differences in the Torahs descriptions to the practices of today.
7.11
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STANDARD 7
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
7.12
Analyzes the connection between the concept of covenant/brit and the concept of the
mitzvot.
Benchmark Genius: 4.29, 5.6
Suggested Examples:
You shall be to ME, a Kingdom of Priests and a holy nation, Exodus 19:1-6; all that the
lord has spoken, we will do!, Exodus 19:8, ( , , ' "
;)Rashi Commentary on Exodus 17:3, At the foot of the mountain.
Sample Learning Activities:
Offer an explanation of a connection between mitzvot and what it means to be holy.
Explain the concept of commandedness ().
Discuss what it means to be obligated.
Debate: Must the Israelites accept the brit in its entirety in order to be a Holy Nation?
Write a point/counterpoint article: We had no choice!/We accepted willingly!
7.13
Compares and contrasts different sources and concepts in the Torah regarding Shabbat
observance.
Suggested Examples:
Creation, Genesis 2:1-3; the Decalogue, Exodus 20:8-11, and the Decalogue,
Deuteronomy 5:12-15; observance of Shabbat within the instructions for the mishkan,
Exodus 31:12-17; a part of the Holiness Code, Leviticus 19:3; wood gatherer, Numbers
15:32-36.
Sample Learning Activities:
Compare and contrast the Decalogue in Exodus to the Decalogue in Deuteronomy in
regard to Shabbat observance.
Connect the concepts of creation ( ) and redemption (
)to Shabbat observance.
Explore the concept of Shabbat as a sign of the covenant (( ) Exodus
31:16-17).
Analyze the centrality of Shabbat in the performance of mitzvot.
Research how Shabbat was celebrated in different countries at different times as it
relates back to the biblical injunctions.
7.14
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Hodesh, Numbers 28:11-15; Rosh Hashanah, Numbers 29:1-6; Yom Kippur, Numbers
29:7-11.
Sample Learning Activities:
Note changes and similarities in practice over time, e.g., Pesah mitzrayim and Pesah
dorot. Pesah in the time of the Mishnah and Pesah today.
Find verses in the Torah that appear in the Haggadah and explore the changes from
their original contexts.
Explain a development of a mitzvah from its biblical origins to modern observance.
Add appropriate details from biblical text for a holiday log or journal.
7.15
7.16
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Deuteronomy 21:1-10; return of a lost object, Deuteronomy 22:1-4; justice, Exodus 2122, Leviticus 19:15-16, Deuteronomy 16:18-21.
Suggested Resource:
Elliott Dorff, Mitzvah Means Commitment.
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine mitzvot for their implications to society.
Envision mitzvah as how it could be accomplished in modern times.
7.17
Categorizes various different mitzvot given in the Torah according to their type, form or
context.
Suggested Examples:
The Decalogue, Exodus 20:1-14; religious, legal and civil mitzvot, Exodus 20-25; Holiness
Code, Leviticus 19.
Sample Learning Activities:
Categorize given mitzvot, e.g., positive and negative mitzvot, ritual and ethical (
,), legal, mitzvot dependent on having the Land of Israel/(
) .
Create a sorting board from an amended list of taryag/613 mitzvot.
Keep a mitzvah journal.
Participate in a class PAC (Political Action Committee) for a specific cause, e.g., the
environment, a charity, a justice issue or a Jewish education issue and find mitzvot to
support the concept.
7.18
7.19
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Suggested Resource:
Jeffrey Salkin, Putting God on the Guest List, How to Claim the Spiritual Meaning of Your
Bar/Bat Mitzvah.
Sample Learning Activities:
Participate in a parent/student dialogue on what it means to be a bar/bat mitzvah.
Write or give a devar Torah on what it means to become a bar/bat mitzvah.
Take on a number of mitzvot as obligations.
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STANDARD 7
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
7.20
7.21
Examines the sociological and philosophical relationship between law/mitzvot and narrative
as suggested by biblical texts.
Benchmark Genius: 4.31
Suggested Examples:
The rise of civilization, issues of good and evil, moral corruption, Genesis 3, 4, 6, 11, 12,
19; Noahide laws, Genesis 9:1-8; Numbers.
Suggested Resources:
Nehama Leibowitz, Studies in the book of Genesis, pp. 17-116, 164-172; Robert Cover,
The Supreme Court 1982 Term-Foreword: Nomos and Narrative, Harvard Law Review
97, no. 1 (1983).
Sample Learning Activities:
Examine a narrative to see how it impacts on a law or a need for mitzvot.
Show how both narratives and law act as formative foundations for different societies.
Define the impact of law on the individual and society.
Write an etiological narrative of a law.
Compare issues studied in the U.S. Constitution and the governmental system to the
Jewish law system.
Examine the role of law and mitzvot when reading, for example, Lord of the Flies or
Catcher in the Rye.
7.22
Compares the narrative descriptions of mitzvot in the Torah with their actual historical
manifestations.
Suggested Examples:
Shabbat, the Decalogue, Exodus 20:8-10 and Deuteronomy 5:12-15; mitzvot dependent
on being in Israel, cities of refuge, Numbers 35; sabbatical and jubilee years, Exodus
23:11 and 34:21, Leviticus 25:5-11; gleanings, corners and forgotten sheaves, Leviticus
19, 9, 10, 24; centralized cult, Deuteronomy 12:14.
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7.23
Traces the evolution of dietary laws in the Torah and in its post-biblical observance.
Suggested Examples:
Creation and vegetarianism, Genesis 1:29; Noahide laws, Genesis 9-5; dietary laws,
Leviticus 11, Deuteronomy 14:1-22; prohibitions against boiling a kid in its mothers
milk, Exodus 23:19, 34:26 and Deuteronomy 14:21; being distinct, Leviticus 20:22-26;
narratives, Genesis 43:32, Judges 13:4-14, Daniel 1:8, 12.
Suggested Resources:
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger; United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism CD-ROM,
Kashrut: Sanctifying the Ordinary, Ed Greenstein, Dietary Laws, Etz Hayim Torah and
Commentary.
Sample Learning Activities:
Explore the importance of distinctions or separations in the Torah, e.g., clean/unclean,
pure/impure, sacred/profane , becoming a distinct people.
Analyze the role of dietary laws in maintaining ethnic identity in biblical narratives.
Examine the role of dietary laws in connection to creation and covenant and imitation
dei.
Examine the role of kahsrut in sanctifying daily lives.
Research post-bliblical narratives as expressions of Jewish identity, e.g., Judith 12:2, 2
Maccabees 6-7.
Compare the laws of kashrut to dietary laws in ancient cultures.
7.24
Develops personal responses to questions around divine reward and punishment with regard
to mitzvot.
Suggested Resources:
Exodus 23:25-27; 32:33-34, Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 4:25-28, 5:9-10; 11:13-21; Isaiah
43:25, 44:22, 52:13-52:12, Jeremiah 5:15-17, 19:9, Amos 2, Jonah; Maimonides,
Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Teshuvah.
Sample Learning Activities:
Develop a personal response to the concept of divine reward and punishment.
Analyze passages on reward and punishment throughout the TaNaKH for commonalities
and note differences.
Trace the development of the concept of teshuvah in the TaNaKH and compare it to the
rabbinic notion of teshuvah.
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7.25
Constructs a personal meaning system that contains a conception of the relationship between
God, Israel, biblical law and the ongoing development of Jewish law.
Benchmark Genius: 6.30
Suggested Examples:
Revelation at Sinai, Exodus 19-20; Deuteronomy 30:11-14; Tanur shel Achnai,
Babylonian Talmud, Baba Metziah 59b, Avot 1:1.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated with rabbinics.
Sample Learning Activities:
Research the development of a given law from its Torah origins through rabbinic
interpretations through modern-day responsa literature.
Write about the implications of being commanded through a system of Jewish Law.
7.26
Interprets the tension between moral and ritual mitzvot as presented by the prophets.
Suggested Examples:
Isaiah 1:11-17 and 58; Micah 6:6-8; Amos 1:3-2.
Suggested Resource:
Shalom Spiegel, Amos vs. Amatziah
Sample Learning Activities:
Present a prophetic argument that highlights this tension.
Write an op-ed article: When ritual is not enough or Is there more to life than just
being good?
Analyze selected haftarah portions and their matching Torah portions for this tension.
Dramatize a confrontation between a prophet and a high priest.
7.27
Explores the connection between the different categories of mitzvot in the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 20:23-19; Leviticus 18-19, 25, Deuteronomy 5:6-18, 13-16, 18-24:16, civil,
criminal, religious, cultic, moral, ethical, societal, personal, communal mitzvot.
Suggested Resources:
Exursus 13 and 16, The arrangement of Laws in Deuteronomy and The Laws of
Deuteronomy 16, The JPS Torah Commentary, Deuteronomy.
Sample Learning Activities:
Offer interpretations of the structure of legal sections.
Suggest how to understand each law as part of a system of law.
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7.28
7.29
Compares the underlying premises of and philosophies of biblical law to American law.
Suggested Resource:
Robert Cover, Obligation: A Jewish Jurisprudence of Social Order, The Journal of Law
and Religion 5, no. 1 (1987), Hamlin Law School.
Sample Learning Activity:
Write a paper that compares and contrasts the differences between rights and
obligations in the two legal systems.
7.30
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Standard 8
Students will develop a love of Torah study for its own sake and embrace it as
an inspiring resource, informing their values, moral commitments and ways of
experiencing the world.
PREAMBLE
Talmud Torah Keneged Kulam: That study of Torah ultimately leads to all other good
endeavors is a fundamental principle of Jewish text study and represents a core value of the
Jewish people. This standard provides teachers and students with a lens through which to
explore the TaNaKH as a dynamic text that can profoundly influence values and a sense of
moral commitments as well as foster a love of Torah study for its own sake.
The notion of loving Torah study is a complex one. Jewish tradition has always held, as this
standard does, that the study of Torah is not merely a cognitive act, but has implications for the
affective and behavioral domains too. Torah study may lead us to great insights, may stimulate
our moral reflection or may simply be a powerful ongoing ritual act that situates our lives in
ancient conversations. At the heart of this standard is the belief that students will see the Torah
as a central place to go to help them think about their actions in the world.
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STANDARD 8
GRADE LEVEL K-2 BENCHMARKS
8.1
8.2
8.3
8.4
Connects the study of Torah to significant people and activities outside of formal class-time.
Benchmark Genius: 6.3
Suggested Examples:
Invite parents, the principal or other guests for shared Torah study sessions. Create
special time for challenging Torah-related questions. Have a Kabbalat HaTorah
celebration.
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STANDARD 8
GRADE LEVEL 3-5 BENCHMARKS
8.5
8.6
8.7
Compares dilemmas in ones own personal life with dilemmas explored in biblical narrative.
Benchmark Genius: 2.18
Suggested Examples:
Family relationships, sibling rivalry, jealousy, making choices.
Sample Learning Activities:
Make links between events described in the biblical narrative and personal experience.
Respond to What might this be like today?
Correspond with a biblical figure, taking on both roles.
8.8
Compares different TaNaKH texts that offer various approaches to teacher-selected moral
dilemmas.
Suggested Example:
Ruth versus Parashat Mishpatim regarding Jewish/Israelite relationships with nonJews/Moabites.
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8.9
8.10
8.11
Suggests titles for biblical passages that capture their modern moral equivalents.
Suggested Examples:
Is it okay to hit a bully? for Moses and the Egyptian, Exodus 2; You cant get angry if
youre a leader for the Golden Calf, Exodus 32.
8.12
Articulates the idea that Torah study is concerned with moral questions.
Benchmark Genius: 6.6
Sample Learning Activity:
Create with a big idea for advocating Torah study.
8.13
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STANDARD 8
GRADE LEVEL 6-8 BENCHMARKS
8.14
8.15
Analyzes and evaluates the TaNaKHs internal resolutions of its conflicts and moral dilemmas.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis: Cain and Abel; punishment in the flood generation; Tower of Babel; Abraham
and Lot; Sodom, Sarah and Hagar; Rebecca, Jacob and Esau; Jacob and Laban; Joseph
and his brothers.
Exodus: Bat-Pharaoh and the midwives, Moses and the Egyptian.
Numbers: Miriam and Moses; Pinches, Omri and Zimri.
I Samuel: Samuel, Saul and Agag.
II Samuel: David and Bathsheba.
I Kings: Ahab, Jezebel and Navot.
Sample Learning Activities:
Do a dramatic reading of the biblical text that conveys a personal position.
Write a journal entry in the voice of a biblical character.
Evaluate the acts of biblical characters.
Create a scruples game.
Participate in a trial of a personality or a situation.
Debate various sides of a conflict or situation.
8.16
Articulates the universal aspects of specific themes and ideas in the Torah.
Suggested Examples:
Sibling rivalry (Cain and Abel, Isaac and Ishmael, Joseph and his brothers, Rachel and
Leah); jealousy (Hagar and Sarah); compassion and friendship (David and Jonathan, Ruth
and Naomi); communal responsibility ( ) taking care of the poor and
disenfranchised); the need for law and precedents (Revelation, the Decalogue,
Mishpatim, Zelophehads daughters); rebellion (Israelites, Korach); human strengths and
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foibles; good and evil; free will (Adam); covenant and obligation; reward and
punishment; feminism, moral courage (midwives, Pharaohs daughter).
Sample Learning Activities:
Share examples from the present in discussing the text.
Create a newspaper with articles reflecting a theme in the modern idiom.
Write or act in a parable based on a theme of the text.
Given a theme or verse from the text, design an collage reflecting the theme.
8.17
Applies key phrases and quotes drawn from biblical texts to real life situations in which moral
questions are raised.
Benchmark Genius: 6.21
Suggested Examples:
In the image of God (Gen. 1:27) ()
Am I brothers keeper? (Gen. 4:9) ()
Honor your father and mother. (Exod. 20:12) ()
You shall not insult the deaf. (Lev. 9:14) ()
Do not stand upon your fellows blood. (Lev 19:15) ()
Love your fellow as yourself. (Lev. 19:17) ()
For you were strangers in a strange land. (Lev. 19:34) ()
Justice, justice you shall pursue. (Deut. 16:20) ()
Do justice, love goodness and walk humbly with God(Micah 6:8) (
)
Sample Learning Activities:
Write a parable or dvar Torah based on a phrase or verse.
Design a sign and/or illustration with a chosen phrase.
Write a song based on a phrase.
Design the ideal society in response to: What would a society, community or our school
look like if this phrase served as a cornerstone of its vision?
8.18
Examines legal passages in the Torah for their ethical and moral implications.
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 21:1-14, the Decalogue; Exodus 21-25, Parashat Mishpatim, Leviticus 11, dietary
laws; Deuteronomy 22:1-3, returning of a lost object; Deuteronomy 24:17-18, laws
concerning the stranger, widow and orphan; Deuteronomy 24:19-22, laws of leaving
sheaves and corners of the field for the indigent and disenfranchised.
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze the rationale of a law when it was originally applied and both how and why its
application may have evolved over time.
Explore how the law may appear in Judaism today.
Examine the rational of a law when started.
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8.19
8.20
Articulates various perspectives on modern moral issues using either teacher or studentidentified biblical texts.
Benchmark Genius: 3.3, 4.25, 7.28
Suggested Examples:
Equality of humankind; revenge and justice; war and the pursuit of peace; morality in
warfare; abuse of power and moral corruption; family loyalty and conflicts; deceit,
personal integrity and honesty; attitudes of Jews toward others; justice and mercy;
meaningful laws; verbal and physical violence; creating a just society reward and
punishment.
Sample Learning Activities:
Abstract major moral themes from biblical contexts.
Raise questions about the morality of a narrative or a law in the light of the Torahs
own truths and/or in light of a personal ethical view.
Relate current news or a current topic to Torah study.
Argue dilemmas from a personal perspective.
Take and state a position in four corners.
Do investigative reporting and an interview.
8.21
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STANDARD 8
GRADE LEVEL 9-12 BENCHMARKS
8.22
Evaluates legal passages in the Torah within their historical/biblical context for their ethical
and moral implications.
Benchmark Genius: 4.30, 6.24, 7.18
Suggested Examples:
Lex talionis (an eye for an eye), laws of slavery, levirate marriage, sacrifices, civil and
criminal laws, courts and witnesses, laws of warfare.
Suggested Resource:
Moshe Greenberg, The Biblical Grounding of Human Value
Sample Learning Activities:
Explain and analyze Pentateuchal law within its historical/biblical context.
Trace the development and changes in law (can be integrated within a rabbinics unit).
Compare a law to an ancient and Near Eastern law. (See Standard 2)
8.23
8.24
Uses a variety of methods for responding to ethically problematic narratives and laws.
Suggested Examples:
Genesis 27, Jacobs deception of Isaac; Genesis 34, rape of Dina and revenge of Simon
and Levi; Numbers 5:11-29, Laws of the Sotah; Deuteronomy 20:17, laws of herem
(destroying the inhabitants of the land).
Suggested Resources:
Moshe Greenberg, Moral Issues in the Bible, lecture on video, JTS; Barry Holtz, Textual
Knowledge: Teaching Bible in Theory and Practice, pp. 129-149.
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Heritage Instructional Leadership Institute, Davidson School of Education, Jewish Theological Seminary.
Sample Learning Activities:
Evaluate a selection for its timelessness or its place within a historical context.
Refer to commentaries to compare various interpretations.
Recognize that the Torah presents unanswered and unanswerable questions.
8.25
Explains how traditional and modern biblical commentators develop biblical issues of
morality.
Benchmark Genius: 2.17
Suggested Examples:
Moshe Greenberg, On Teaching the Bible in Religious Schools, Jewish Education, 29,
no. 3 (1959); 45-33; Nehama Leibowitz, Studies in the Book of Genesis, pp. 53-59.
Sample Learning Activity:
Research commentaries on an issue of morality.
Write an editorial on a biblical issue.
8.26
Identifies issues of social justice in the TaNaKH and applies its messages.
Benchmark Genius: 4.30, 7.16
Suggested Examples:
Exodus, slavery; Leviticus 19, Parashat Kedoshim; Deuteronomy 16:1-12, tithing and
caring for the poor, Isaiah 2:1-4, call for peace; Isaiah 58:2-7, call to correct societal ills;
Jeremiah 8:10-12, acting falsely; Jeremiah 9:23, call for kindness, justice and equality;
Amos 4:1-3 and 5:12-13, corrupt courts and human disregard; Amos 5:21-25, call for
righteousness and justice.
Curricular Suggestion:
Can be integrated with a social-studies elective, e.g., poverty in America, emerging
nations.
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze current-events issues through the lens of a Torah text.
Debate the role of ritual in fostering moral and ethical behavior.
Identify the theme of the religious imperative and the theme of the need for freedom,
law, land and self-governance throughout the biblical narrative.
Compare and contrast the other cultures and societies self-definitions to emergent
Israelite society.
Interview a social activist on a particular social; initiates or joins a social-action
committee.
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Copyrighted material. Not to be reproduced or shared without explicit permission from the Legacy
Heritage Instructional Leadership Institute, Davidson School of Education, Jewish Theological Seminary.
8.27
Analyzes the potential inspirational impact of biblical poems, psalms and proverbs on the
reader.
Suggested Examples:
Exodus 15, Deuteronomy 28-32, Judges 4, Psalms 14, 23, 34, 117, 150, 126.
Sample Learning Activities:
Analyze a biblical poem using modern literary techniques.
Based on the students knowledge of Tehillim, write a personal psalm.
Write poetic interpretations of biblical events in the voice of biblical characters in a
particular setting.
8.28
8.29
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