- education
Florida Chabad House Opens a School for
Children With Special Needs
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A happy student during the first
week of instruction at the South Florida Jewish Academy
By Norm Oshrin
Aug 24, 2007
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For
Nancy Popick, Monday, Aug. 20, "was the most unstressful
first day we ever had."
It
was the day Jason, her seven-year-old son with special
needs, began studying at the new South Florida Jewish
Academy.
He
was one of 15 children with special needs entering the
building formerly occupied by the South Florida Academy
of Learning, which Jason – who has auditory processing
disorder – had attended.
Chabad-Lubavitch
of Coconut Creek & West Pompano Beach purchased the
school and building, with the help of philanthropist Morris
Tabacinic and family, of Bal Harbour, Fla., in April.
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"We didn't have to worry: 'Is he going to learn today?'"
said Popick, of Jason.
She
knew he would.
According
to Baila Gansburg, the school's director, the opportunity
to continue the tradition of the old school and infuse
it with the rigors of a Jewish day-school curriculum,
all while providing a challenging yet fun learning environment
for children with learning disabilities, just couldn't
be passed up.
"We
did not plan on opening a school like this," said
Gansburg, co-director along with her husband Rabbi Yossi
Gansburg of the Chabad House that purchased the 5,000-square-foot
facility. The original plan called for operating a Jewish
preschool for about 75 students.
Parents
from the old school, though, had nowhere else to turn.
"They
asked up to keep the door open for this," said Gansburg.
"We have kids from Boynton Beach and North Miami.
Some are traveling an hour to come here."
The
Popicks travel a half-hour each way from their home in
Coral Springs to the school in Coconut Creek. The mother
said that had Chabad not taken over the school's operations,
her only alternative was to "probably put [Jason]
back in public school and pay for one-on-one tutoring."
Barbara
Lichtenstein, of Boca Raton, whose son, Michael, 8, copes
with a development disorder and also attended the former
school, was equally ecstatic with Chabad taking over.
"We
were going to keep our son home," she said. "There
aren't too many places to go if they have a need for a
little extra help. We were thrilled when they decided
to keep the school going."
Public
school, explained Popick, just didn't do it for her Jason.
"They
didn't understand him well," she lamented. "There
was no one-on-one teaching environment, which he has to
have with socially appropriate peers."
Lichtenstein
concurred.
"These
students are of a very high-level of functioning with
a lot of potential," she said, "so you don't
want to put them in a class with children of more-severe
difficulties.
"Yet
they are going to need more help than in any regular classroom
if they go to public school. They need more individualized
attention."
Emphasizing
the Individual

Director
Baila Gansburg gives individual attention
to a student learning the Hebrew alphabet.
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South Florida Jewish Academy employs a multiage education
model that splits children into groups corresponding to
Kindergarten through Grade 1, Grade 1 through Grade 3,
Grade 4 through Grade 6, and Grade 6 through Grade 8.
Educators hail such a system as inherently flexible; by
challenging the commonly-held belief that students of
the same age possess the same level of cognitive ability,
according to the school's Web site, sfal.org, multiage
classroom structures "emphasize achievement for every
student, thereby enhancing academic, social and emotional
growth."
The
academy is accredited by the Florida Council of Independent
Schools, but because of new ownership will have to be
reevaluated after three years.
Skardon
Bliss, executive director of the Tampa, Fla.-based council,
confirmed that the reaccreditation process has already
begun, and that the staff, including Gansburg, two teachers
certified in special education, and two teacher aides,
will attend professional development programs.
The
school's annual tuition is $18,000, although some parents,
like Popick, are benefiting from state-subsidized grants.
Gansburg
said that children with Asperger's syndrome, autism, attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder, dyslexia, perceptual impairment
– even those who can't cope in a large classroom setting
– will all do well at the school.
"The
curriculum, secular and Hebrew, is based on the levels
that the children can learn," stated Gansburg, a
former teacher. "It is all individualized" and
includes supplemental visits by occupational and speech
therapists, and physical education.
Both
Popick and Lichtenstein were sold on the school by Gansburg's
commitment and enthusiasm.
After
attending Gansburg's presentation earlier this year, in
which she showed a video drawing analogies between the
wondrous variety of animal life and the individuality
of children, Popick was impressed.
"You
got the sense how well she understands the kids and how
they learn," she said.
"Baila
is such a loving person," said Lichtenstein. "You
can tell it comes from the heart, [especially] to make
allowances for the kids to learn about Judaism. I'm doubly
excited because Michael will get a Jewish day school education."
Rabbi
Yossi Gansburg, the school director's husband and co-director
with her of the Chabad House, is providing the Jewish
curriculum component.
"Michael
loves it," said Lichtenstein. "He knew a couple
of the children who are returning, and met new children."
News
of the school's opening is being spread by word of mouth,
stories in the local media and brochures strategically
placed in doctors' and therapists' offices.
"We
only announced on June 8 that we were going to be doing
this and we are getting calls every day," exclaimed
Baila Gansburg. "We had intervention from above."