David Yellin College of Education

Coordinates: 31°46.914′N 35°11.433′E / 31.781900°N 35.190550°E / 31.781900; 35.190550

Facade of the building

David Yellin College of Education is an academic teachers college in Jerusalem, Israel established in 1913.

The college is one of the first teacher's colleges in the Land of Israel that taught in Hebrew. Known as "Seminar Beit Hakerem" it was situated on a hilltop facing the neighbourhood of Beit Hakerem. The college is located on Maagal Beit Hamidrash Street, named after the college.

The students of the college helped protect the Jewish targets of Arab terror in the 1929 and 1936–1939 riots, World War II, the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and the Six Day War. They played an integral role in the defense and guarding system of Beit Hakerem and other areas in Jerusalem.

Today the College grants academic degrees in a wide number of subjects. The college's 5,000 students represent all groups of Israeli society; Jews (religious and secular), Arabs (Muslims and Christians), Druze and Circassians and new immigrants.

History

The college is named after its founder and first principal David Yellin who established it in 1913 as part of the "War of the Languages" and the struggle to teach in Hebrew. The subsequent Principals were Ben-Zion Dinur (Dinburg), Israel Mehlman, Avraham Even-Shoshan, Moshe Gil, Nissan Sheinin, Itai Zimran and Anna Russo.

Studies were conducted in Hebrew with German as the second language. The first class started on 14 December 1913. Students comprised mainly boys from the age of 14. Admission included a health certificate and a "good behavior" report card from an authority such as a Rabbi or a school principal. Entrance exams in Bible, Talmud, Hebrew, Jewish history and general studies were conducted. A good command of German, Hebrew and Turkish were required. Private teachers were offered to students with learning difficulties and monetary help was promised to poor families. The pupils were taught both high school and education studies in order to train them as teachers. After graduation they were expected to teach for two years wherever the administration placed them. Between 1913–1938 David Yellin headed the "Hebrew Teacher's Institute".

Although World War I broke out a year after its establishment, teaching and education continued despite the difficult conditions of the Old Yishuv.

The college,established in Beit HaKerem, Jerusalem, greatly influenced the development and character of the neighborhood. The college attracted teachers and intellectuals to the area in addition to those who founded the neighborhood. The students rented rooms in local homes and became part of the local atmosphere. In the summer their rooms were let to tourists from the coastal area and so it became a center for summer vacations. For many years the main synagogue was located in the seminar.

During the 1929 Palestine riots the residents of Beit HaKerem, the workers district Kiryat Moshe and Bayit Vegan, old and young, took refuge in the seminary's unfinished building. The people occupied all the rooms while the hall (eventually to become the gym) was used as a cow shed. Guards armed with rifles were stationed on the roof of the building and fired at the rioters from Dir Yassin, a village west of the wadi, who tried to infiltrate the area and reach the seminary building. The residents were blockaded in the building for a week until the danger passed.

Today, the college awards a BEd degree and a teacher's certificate in the following subjects: preschool education, elementary and high school education, special education, education for intellectual and developmental disabilities, informal education, open education, anthroposophical education. It offers master's degrees in education (M.Ed) in the therapies :art therapy, music therapy, bibliotherapy and pet therapy and in special education, teaching and learning, library and information science.

See also

References

    External links

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Yellin College of Education.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.