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Old 03-08-2007, 04:30 AM   #1
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Jewish College Life - Take 2

http://www.jewishpress.com/page.do/2...3C%2Fi%3E.html


What is your college (or prospective college's) Jewish Community like?
What kind of facilities does your college have, or what do you want your prospective college's Jewish life to be like?
Does your school have both Chabad-Lubavitch programs and Hillel?
Do the two groups "get along"?
What kinds of student groups are sponsored by Hillel, Chabad, etc...?
Do many students do Taglit/Birthright Israel?
Does your school have a separate department of Judaic or Jewish Studies?

This is just a thread to talk about Jewish College life, and that only .
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Old 03-08-2007, 10:12 AM   #2
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My school, Brandeis, is probably the only plurality Jewish secular school in the country.
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Old 03-11-2007, 12:05 PM   #3
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My d is interested in Conn College, Skidmore and Dickinson. We know they all have Hillel on campus, but because the numbers of Jewish students are small, can anyone give a little better insight into the quality of Jewish life on those campuses?
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Old 03-11-2007, 12:27 PM   #4
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The numbers of Jewish students are small because the colleges are small, but proportion-wise there's a lot of Jews.
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Old 03-12-2007, 02:04 PM   #5
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conn's hillel is small, but very active.
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Old 03-12-2007, 02:06 PM   #6
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My son is a senior at Conn. He himself is NOT active with Hillel. However, the school always has its Fall break over Yom Kippor, rather than Columbus Day like most other schools. I always thought that was very considerate.
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Old 03-13-2007, 03:02 AM   #7
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Welcoming this thread. Great idea.

Does everybody know about this resource:

http://www.hillel.org/HillelApps/JLOC/Search.aspx

I hope the link works! If not, just google up "Hillel college" and go to the button on left menu, "Guide to Jewish Life on Campus"

Type in the college you're wondering about and read the stats.

Then, of course, look at each individual college for its Hillel website, and email their contact info for more.

hatzlacha; strength to ya!
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Old 03-13-2007, 03:55 AM   #8
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Heavenwood, that's an important distinction.

Studies show >20% enrolled Jewish population feels "vibrant" and yet LAC's range from 10-30%, so know what you're getting into. At universities, check out % for graduate students and undergrads, since they might interact during Hillel, services, political discussions, etc.

If the % sounds too small to make you happy, next step is to find out if the Hillel or other organiations are strong and dynamic. They'll always say they are..but the point is, if you don't like organizations but want to have some chance to meet Jewish students, then the % enrolled becomes more important to you


Plus other considerations: Academic offerings (check and count up courses in many departments, such as "Near East Studies" "Comparative Relgion" "Women's Studies" "Semitic Languages" etc.

See if the professors are adjunct (only teach a course and then go home) or actually are with the college fulltime, as an Assistant Prof, Assoc. Prof, or Full Professor in the department.

Can you major or minor?

If there;s a rabbi, does s/he serve that school's Hilllel or rotate with other schools? Do you see your denomination's services (Reform, Conservative, ORthodox, Reconstructionist, unnamed), and if not, are you ready to try a different kind?

So many things to consider...

Can others think and add more things to look for?

Thanks for starting this thread, tokyorevelation9

Last edited by paying3tuitions; 03-13-2007 at 04:03 AM.
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Old 03-13-2007, 10:11 AM   #9
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It is true you need to look at how many active members there are in Hillel type organizations. My daughter is looking at a school that has only 50 active members, but the school is very small. This is the first year of their Hillel affiliation, so it might collapse if active members graduate and newer members don't keep it going. Could people talk about their experiences with smaller schools in the South? Skip the schools like Emory, Tulane and Vanderbilt. My daughter is interested in smaller schools in North Carolina and South Carolina maybe Virginia. How about: High Point, Elon, Queens of Charlotte, UNC Asheville, Winthrop, Furman, Wofford. I know some of these are bigger. Is a rural location more of a problem? Being near a city, means more access to synagogues.
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Old 03-13-2007, 01:46 PM   #10
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paying3tuitions: great points...especially about the academic offerings. D and I ruled out one small college in the midwest that she was initially interested in, based upon the fact that they didn't offer any classes in Hebrew there, as well as the fact that their Hillel/Jewish student group website looked like it hadn't been updated in a year or two. Which brings me to another suggestion...

If you're interested in a school, check out their Hillel organization's website, particularly the calendar of upcoming events. If there events listed are out of date (especially if the site hasn't been updated in a year, or more), it could just be that the site's webmaster is busy, but if it's been a really long time, it might be sign that the current Jewish community at the school has dwindled and/or is not very active.

Definitely call the Hillel organization at the school that you're interested in. Ask them a specific question, such as, on average, how many kids show up for services, or other events. Ask them if they can send you any literature. My D has been accepted at Penn State, Ohio State, among others. I contacted the Hillels at both OSU and PSU: Both were friendly and informative and sent me brochures of their upcoming events for the coming quarter/semester.

dg5052: At one time, my D was interested in Dickinson, so I did some (mainly online) research. Their Hillel looked like a small but active group and I think that I recall that they had their own free-standing center...? If I also recall, I think that Dickinson has a decent number of Jewish students for a college its size. Have you tried contacting them? And I, too, would be interested in hearing more about Skidmore's Hillel group, (since I don't think that you can access their Hillel's website) for future reference, for my D2. Good luck to your D.

Tokyorevelation9, thank you so much for restarting this thread and getting the topic back on track.
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Old 03-13-2007, 04:54 PM   #11
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Momonthehill, we have just visited Skidmore and Dickinson--my d stayed overnight with a girl that the Hillel director at each school connected her with--it was a gamble, but it paid off. She liked both girls and their friends very much, and she LOVED both schools. At Dickinson, Hillel has its own building right next to the Admissions Office. I didn't see a building at Skidmore, but Hillel had a huge banner hung in the student center.
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Old 03-13-2007, 09:36 PM   #12
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An edition of Reform Judaism had the following list in an article titled "The
Top 60 Schools Jews Choose":

Private Schools
1. NYU
2. Boston University
3. University of Pennsylvania
4. Cornell University
5. Yeshiva
6. GWU
7. Syracuse
8. Emory
9. Northwestern
10. Tulane
11. Harvard
12. Columbia
13. Brandeis
14. Washington U. St. Louis
15. Tufts
16. Brown
17. Hofstra
18. Long Island University, Brooklyn
19. U Hartford
20. U Miami (FL)
21. Yale
22. American
23. Barnard
24. Northeastern
25. Oberlin
26. U Denver
27. Vanderbilt
28. Wesleyan
29. U Rochester
30. Drexel

Public Schools
1. U Florida
2. U Maryland, College Park
3. Rutgers
4. U Centeral Florida
5. York U (Toronto)
6. Penn State
7. U Michigan, Ann Arbor
8. U Wisconsin, Madison
9. U Texas, Austin
10. Florida International U
11. U Albany
12. Indiana U
13. McGill U (Montreal)
14. U Arizona (Tucson)
15. Queens College (NY)
16. Binghamton U
18. California State U, Northridge
19. CUNY, Brooklyn College
20. Florida State U
21. Ohio State U
22. U Western Ontario
23. U Illinois, Urbana, Champaign
24. UC Santa Cruz
25. Michigan State, East Lansing
26. San Diego State
27. UCLA
28. UC Davis
29. Arizona State (Tempe)
30a. U Mass Amherst
30b. U Pittsburgh
30c. U Washington

The article apparently lists by absolute number of Jewish students,
which I guess is why the lists are large university heavy.

The magazine had several articles on college selection, admissions and
financing. I don't know if the link still works.
www.reformjudaismmag.org

I can vouch for Michigan. Thousands of Jewish people at the school.
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Old 03-13-2007, 10:21 PM   #13
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At Tufts, I think every third person is Jewish -- if not more.

And my brother calls his school: Jewniversity of Pennsylvasia.
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Old 03-13-2007, 10:21 PM   #14
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That's a great list of schools--as long as you are looking for a large school. The difficulty lies in determining what is an appropriate Jewish community for a kid who wants/needs to be at a small liberal arts college.

My d would love to stay in the Southeast, but unfortunately, there are no small LAC's in our area that have any sort of acceptable Jewish population--and she won't look at Tulane because she's afraid of being evacuated for hurricanes.

If anyone has any brilliant suggestions in this regard, I would love to hear them!
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Old 03-13-2007, 10:28 PM   #15
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"Acceptable" Jewish population?
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