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The Talmudical Academy of Baltimore or TA (Hebrew: ישיבת חפץ חיים) is a K–12 yeshiva founded in 1917. Its present campus, located at 4445 Old Court Road, includes a pre-school building, an elementary school building, a middle school building, a high school building, three gymnasiums, a dormitory, two computer labs, and two study halls which double as prayer sanctuaries.
The school has a dual curriculum including secular subjects and judaics, with the school day generally split in order to cover both curricula. The NETA program serves as the Hebrew language curriculum for the school. [4] As of 2024, the high school is ranked as one of the top 40 Jewish high schools in the nation. [5]
School name Affiliation Gender Grades Website Archbishop Curley High School: Roman Catholic: boys 9-12 www.archbishopcurley.org: Bais Yaakov of Baltimore: Jewish girls 6-12 www.baisyaakov.net: Baltimore Junior Academy: Seventh-day Adventist: co-ed K-12 www.bjacademy.org: Boys' Latin School of Maryland: non-sectarian: boys K-12 www.boyslatinmd ...
The first Beth Tfiloh Day School Kindergarten class was organized in 1942 with five students in the school's original Forest Park location in Baltimore City. The school was created by Rabbi Samuel Rosenblatt, founder of the Modern Orthodox synagogue Beth Tfiloh Congregation in Baltimore, to address the needs of Jewish families who desired a co-educational program which integrated a secular ...
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A New York State Police Department cruiser is parked in front of Cornell University's Center for Jewish Living, in Ithaca, New York, Monday, Oct 30, 2023.
NJROTC cadets visiting USS Theodore Roosevelt in November 2005. According to Title 10, Section 2031 [1] of the United States Code, the purpose of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps is "to instill in students in [the United States] secondary educational institutions the values of citizenship, service to the United States, and personal responsibility and a sense of accomplishment."
Rim says, in many cases, families are replacing those schools with colleges they consider safer for Jewish students, such as Emory, Vanderbilt and Washington University in St. Louis, Rim says.