Insights

Wisdom from our team, board, network of trailblazing leaders, and beyond… at your fingertips.

Insights

Wisdom from our team, board, network of trailblazing leaders, and beyond… at your fingertips.

  • Innovator Spotlight: David Winitsky & the Jewish Plays Project David Winitsky calls himself a “late in life Jew.” Raised in […]

  • Three years ago, Julie Hammerman launched JLens as a channel for Jews to apply a Jewish values lens to investing. […]

  • How might we change our robust Jewish communal landscape by changing our innovation culture as well?

    Innovative Ideas

    Living and working in Silicon Valley, I hear the word innovation on a daily basis at the grocery store, at the gym, even at Friday night services. Companies are hiring Chief Innovation Officers and foundations are creating new grants specifically for innovation. The word is used so much, but Im not sure we all define it in the same way. Is it innovative because its new? Not necessarily. Is it innovative because it utilizes technology? Im not so sure. The overuse of the word, perhaps, is a product of the misuse of the word. As all educators know, its not about the destination; its about the journey. And, in this case, its not about innovation a product or outcome; its about innovating a process of building, measuring, and learning.

  • Categories: Announcements

    Dear UpStart Community, It is with tremendous excitement that I write you today as UpStart's new CEO. Over the last few weeks, I've had the privilege of sharing UpStart's work with family, friends, colleagues, and community members. To me, UpStart's mission boils down to a simple notion - that we must seize the central opportunity presented to the Jewish community today: How might we foster the creation of new access points to the gift of Jewish tradition in ways that provide a deeper and more relevant sense of meaning for our community?

  • The soul of Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur liturgy is the netaneh tokef prayer, when we come face to face with the reality that we have so very little control in life. Who shall live, and who shall die? Who will become wealthy, and who poor? Who by fire and who by water? Who in his time, and who not in his time (or, in Leonard Cohens wordsWho in the merry merry month of May and who by slow decay?)

  • Purim is a reminder that we must live in the complexity of conflicting narratives. Tapestry by Smadar Livne; courtesy. Rabbi […]

  • Categories: In the Media

    Have you ever picked up a small pitcher of milk for your coffee only to have half of the contents dribble down the side and pool onto the counter?  Often, design is something we dont think about unless it is really bad or really good.  And yet, there is a remarkable and nuanced history behind the shape and construction of almost everything we touch, a story behind the design of each object even the container holding your milk. Once, I thought design meant the funky looking chairs that I couldnt afford from Soho furniture shops.  Then my cousin, a textile designer, explained design to me in very different terms.  Design, she said, is making everyday objects that are both beautiful and functional.  She viewed a well-designed object as art and until that conversation I had never thought of everyday objects that way.

    High design chair

  • Categories: In the Media

    Steve Jobs once said, “to turn really interesting ideas and fledgling technologies into a company that can continue to innovate […]

  • Categories: In the Media

    When we begin to talk about new models, new structures, new leadership, new programs that replace the old, we inevitably have associations, and often those associations are negative.

    bugsI recently attended a workshop as a guest designer at Stanford d.schools K12 Lab Network. The network is in its first year, training teams of teachers from public schools around the Bay Area to use the tools and mindsets of Design Thinking to tackle their challenges. Excitingly, this network was informed by Upstarts work with the Jewish Education Project on the Day School Collaboration Network (DSCN), the first such network of schools in the country using the tools of Design Thinking to address problems across schools. Melissa Pelochino, the networks lead designer and facilitator, was a coach for DSCN in its inaugural year.

    The focus of the workshop was to help schools introduce World Language courses to their students in innovative ways. The day was designed to help the school teams arrive at prototypes they could take back to their schools. The kick-off activity was designed to help the teams develop empathy for their students, for whom learning a foreign language could be very daunting and challenging. It was led by Monica Martinez, the founder of Don Bugito Prehispanic Snaqueria. Thats right; the opening activity of the day was eating bugs.

  • Categories: In the Media

    The Talmud in Shabbat 22b recounts a debate about the core mitzvah of Chanukah: Is the mitzvah lighting the candles (hadlaka), or is the mitzvah placing them (hanacha) where they can be widely seen? On the one hand, the entire purpose of lighting the Chanukiah is the lighting itself illuminating the darkness, bringing that flickering light into being. On the other, if the light is hidden away, if it is not shared, what is actually being accomplished?

    HMWThis debate can be understood as a metaphor at the core of any program that is attempting to create change across an entire organization, or network of organizations. If the program is successful in inspiring or changing individuals, but is not effective in creating change within an organization or network as a whole, is it enough? Is it worth it?

    The Day School Collaboration Network (DSCN), a collaboration between The Jewish Education Project and UpStart with funding from UJA-Federation of New York, was originally conceived as a lab of sorts, one that would produce innovative solutions to some of the most pressing challenges facing the Jewish day school world.

  • Categories: In the Media

    donkeys-and-angels picThe past often gets a better rap than the present. Things were good, back in the day. More wholesome. Less complicated. Slower. Kinder. People looked in each others eyes. Children wrote essays without emoticons. Whose great-uncle hasnt complained of having had to walk to school uphill, both ways in the snow, as a child? Life may have been harder, harsher, but it built character, and that character is being lost.

  • Categories: In the Media

    The weeks immediately following the overwhelming month of Tishrei, heavy with Jewish holidays, are always daunting. The workweek seems suddenly endless, […]

  • Categories: In the Media

    We are currently in the second year of experimenting with a new approach to bringing innovative solutions to challenges and opportunities facing NY Jewish Day Schools. The Day School Collaboration Network is a network of educators who share the goal of developing more inspiring, relevant and creative solutions to challenges facing their schools and, by extension, to the broader field of Jewish day school education. This joint project of UpStart Bay Area and The Jewish Education Project made possible by a generous grant from UJA Federation of New York, enables day school educators working at the grass roots (including classroom teachers, curriculum heads, deans, counselors, and learning specialist) to identify and grapple with challenges that impact the field of Jewish day school education, regardless of religious, philosophical, and geographic differences. Before hi-lighting the work of these schools, we want to share some broader observations about this experience.

  • Categories: In the Media

    The Seders Four Elements of Creative Education

    The Pesach Seder, perhaps the most popular of Jewish rituals, is a visceral and meaningful educational experience.  Maybe this is why it has remained so widely celebrated within the Jewish community. As the professional Jewish community continues to struggle with the most effective ways to keep our tradition vibrant and alive, a task that demands tremendous creativity, we can learn a lot from the Seder itself.  The Seder is a model of creative education, which elicits the kind of experiences and ideas critical for the constant renewal of Jewish life. Here are four core educational elements that the Seder embodies, which echo best practices in todays world of innovative education:

    I. Constraints Drive Creativity: Perhaps counter-intuitively, it is only when we are given clear limits and structures that we can be our most creative, innovative selves.

  • Categories: In the Media

    Gross Schechter Day School in Cleveland, Ohio was recently chosen to participate as one of 15 Jewish Day Schools, and one of only two outside of the New York area, in the second year of the Day School Collaboration Network (DSCN).  

    DSCN is a joint project of The Jewish Education Project and Upstart Bay Area, made possible by a generous grant from UJA Federation of New York.  This exciting new initiative utilizes Adaptive Leadership and Design Thinking to to create a shift in mind-sets and skill-sets that will lead to new forms of creativity, distributed leadership, and efficacy within and across schools. 

    In the DSCN, educators from across the religious spectrum address challenges facing individual schools while working together to bring new models and approaches to the broader field of Jewish day school education. 

    A team of four educators from Schechter participated in a two day retreat as part of the schools involvement in the program. The educators included Early Childhood Center director Tracey Bortz, kindergarten teacher Orli Rabkin, fourth grade teacher Donell Newman, and middle school teacher Cheryl Stone. The four spent the retreat working side-by-side with teams from other schools and experts in Design Thinking and Adaptive Leadership.

    Dr. Ari Yares, Head of School at Gross Schechter Day School, participated in the inaugural cohort of DSCN during the prior school year. Dr. Yares shared that through the DSCN, we are acquiring new problem solving skills that allow us to tackle challenges and grow stronger by understanding the needs that underlie those challenges.

    The Jewish Education Projects Director of Jewish Day School Leadership and Innovation, Rabbi Ed Harwitz, has been involved in the program since its inception. He commented that  The DSCN seeks to become the Silicon Valley of the Jewish day school world,  a real location for creativity and measurable innovation.

  • Categories: In the Media

    Perhaps this year the Jewish community can commit itself to taking professional development to the next level, identifying what it might threaten if it is taken seriously, and learning to tolerate some discomfort, some awkwardness, for the sake of swifter, smoother, healthier movement.

    swim1_copyI recently invested in swimming lessons. I love to swim; it is one of my regular ways of exercising. But when an old injury began hurting each time I was in the water, and when my father shared that he'd recently torn a rotator cuff while swimming, I decided that if I am going to continue swimming, I'd better get a few pointers. At first, the lessons were fun I felt like a kid again. Then, I realized something. Each time I was in a lesson, I'd turn, stroke, and kick the way the instructor was teaching me. But each time I swam on my own, I'd revert to my old way of swimming, because it was faster, and more natural. It dawned on me that if I really were going to learn how to swim more efficiently and safely, I would have to endure an unknown period of transition time, during which I felt slow, awkward, and frustrated in the water. Since I've realized this, I've come up with every possible excuse not to swim.

    There is often an aspect of loss involved in any change process.

  • Categories: In the Media

    [eJP note: This piece was published on eJP on May 13, 2009. It is as relevant today as it was then.]

    top10Dr. Anita Friedman, Executive Director of Jewish Family and Childrens Services, the oldest charity west of the Mississippi, and one of the most innovative and successful Jewish organizations in the United States, was this months featured speaker at UpStarts Executive Director Round Table series. Bringing her stellar leadership experience of over thirty years, her sense of humor, and her honesty to the table, she wowed participants with her Yoda-like wisdom Your greatest strength is also your greatest weakness, I hated it so much that I decided to take it over, Its the difference between a Sushi Restaurant and a Cold Dead Fish Restaurant and with her genuine passion and phenomenal knowledge about making organizations thrive.

    Here is her top-ten list of essentials for creating, or transforming, an organization: 

  • Categories: In the Media

    The Torah was given to people. Let us not protect it so hard. It is flexible. It is adaptable. It is resilient. It can expand, and contract. And it teaches us, after all, to put people above all.

    I had the privilege of hearing Rabbi Edward Feinstein speak at The Covenant Foundations gathering of Jewish educators in Chicago last week. His topic was the one around which the entire field of Jewish communal life is currently dancing how might we successfully and meaningfully engage 21st century Jews?

    Rooster-1He began his talk with a Rebbe Nachman of Breslov story. Once upon a time, he shared, there was a little boy who became convinced that he was a rooster. He removed his clothes, huddled under the table, refused to eat anything but rooster food, and communicated by clucking. His parents were beside themselves. They called doctors, teachers, friends, and family, but nobody could convince the boy to abandon his rooster-like ways. Finally, wringing their hands, they called the Rebbe. The Rebbe assessed the situation, and declared that he could cure the boy, though his method may be unorthodox. The parents quickly assented. The Rebbe proceeded to take off his clothes, huddle under the table, eat rooster food, and cluck. After some time, the Rebbe said to the boy: Im cold. What if we put on some human clothes? The boy responded, But were roosters! The Rebbe replied, We can be roosters who wear human clothes! The boy considered this for a moment, and concluded, Fine. That sounds reasonable. They put on clothes. More time passed. The Rebbe said to the boy, I dont like this food. What if we ate some human food? The boy responded, But were roosters! The Rebbe replied, We can be roosters who eat human food. The boy decided, Fine. That is reasonable. And so it went with the huddling under the table, and so, at last, it went with the clucking. The boy was cured.

    Rabbi Feinstein used this story as the core metaphor of his talk. Good Jewish educators connect with people where they are. They get under tables. They eat rooster food. But good Jewish educators ultimately help those with rooster-like tendencies to become more human. That is the value that Judaism brings to their lives; it gets them out from under those tables. The role of the Rebbe is to guide them, step by step, towards the awareness of fuller humanity that is at the core of Jewish wisdom, and towards its embrace. Rabbi Feinstein argued that Judaism, symbolized by the Rebbe, can fill the gaping holes in peoples modern lives, holes they may not even be aware of, providing them with the authentic in the face of a culture that idolizes the entrepreneur, creating for them genuine community in a world of radical individualism.

    But it is this story and what it symbolizes, which I believe is ultimately preventing the Jewish community from successfully engaging 21st century Jews. Rabbi Feinsteins read represents one line of thought that Judaism has something of tremendous value to offer human beings in general, and Jews in particular, and it is our responsibility to ensure that it is embraced by current generations, and, therefore, preserved for future generations. In this approach, whether we are comfortable admitting it or not, the Rebbes way is of greater value than the boys way; the tradition is ultimately of greater value, wiser, deeper, more true, than the people.

    But there is another way to read this story. Might it be possible that the boy is onto something?

  • Categories: In the Media

    An Article from the Jewish Week August 14, 2013 by Julie Wiener What do a group of local Jewish day […]

  • Categories: In the Media

    shofar

    Have you ever seen a straight Shofar? Theres a reason why; according to Jewish law, a Shofar must be crooked. In the first chapter of his Laws of Shofar, Sukkah, and Lulav, Maimonides writes:

  • Categories: In the Media

    An Editorial from the Jweekly August 8, 2013 by Zelig Golden While often providing a meaningful initiation into Judaism, today’s […]

  • Categories: In the Media
    BAchallah_app_small_sizeAn article from the Jweekly
    June 20, 2013

    G-dcast announced this week that its latest animated app one that teaches kids how to make challah and partake in the Jewish rituals surrounding it is available to download for free in the App Store. 

    Lets Bake Challah! is the S.F.-based nonprofits fifth app, but the first designed for 3- to 6-year-olds. Kids using their parents smartphone or iPad get to interact by doing things such as dragging ingredients into a mixing bowl, rolling out dough and braiding the challah. Optional parental settings include prayers, lessons about rituals and a male or female voice.

  • Categories: In the Media
    An Article from the Jweekly
    June 13, 2013
    By Emma Silvers

    UpStart Bay Area, the S.F.-based nonprofit that supports up-and-coming Jewish social entrepreneurs, welcomed three new groups into its cohort this month, while transitioning five current UpStarter organizations to alumni status meaning theyve proven to be sustainable organizations on their own. The new groups cover a wide scope of interests.

  • Categories: In the Media

    innovation_road_signSome of the most exciting developments on todays Jewish landscape come from the innovation sector, which encourages people to take an idea and run with it. Bernstein applies its principles for Jewish education.

    Introduction

    Why is innovation in Jewish education so critical? To reframe the question: if we believe that a Jewish education has something to offer our own community, and that individuals granted this education have something important to offer society at large, isnt it our most important responsibility to ensure that this education is vibrant, creative, inspiring, relevant, thorough, and profoundly meaningful?