Strong Foundations

Where strong foundations are built, and confidence grows.

In Kindergarten at Hebrew Academy, children don’t just learn skills; they begin to understand how they think, ask questions, and make sense of the world around them.

Kindergarten students engaged in joyful academic learning.

You’ll hear it in moments like:

“I figured it out.”   “Let me show you.”   “I know why that works.”

 

That’s what strong foundations look like.

What parents begin to notice

What you’ll see in your child

Student showing confidence while working through a classroom activity.
  • Growing confidence when approaching new challenges
  • The ability to explain their thinking
  • Early reading and writing that feels meaningful, natural, and not forced
  • Curiosity that carries from one subject to another

Connected learning

Learning doesn’t happen in silos here

At Hebrew Academy, subjects aren’t taught in isolation.

A reading lesson becomes a science exploration.

A math activity becomes problem-solving.

A Judaic concept becomes a real-world connection.

Kindergarten students learning through hands-on, connected classroom experiences.

When children understand how ideas connect,
learning becomes meaningful and lasting.

Reading, writing, and thinking

Reading, Writing, and Thinking—Together

Children discussing a story together during literacy instruction.

We use McGraw-Hill Wonders as a foundation, but the value is how we bring it to life.

A single story can lead to:

  • science exploration
  • classification and sorting
  • vocabulary development
  • writing prompts
  • discussion and questioning

Real Example:

A unit on animals might lead students to explore:

  • habitats
  • animal groups
  • protection and survival
  • where animals live and why

Reading isn’t separate. It drives thinking.

Kindergarten student working on beginning writing and sentence development.

From sounds to sentences

Writing doesn’t start with perfection. It starts with expression.

Students move through a natural progression:

  • labeling pictures
  • beginning and ending sounds
  • adding vowels
  • forming words
  • building sentences

Real classroom moment:

A child might write:

  • cat → correct
  • bunny → bne
  • bird → brd

And feel proud.

Because they’re not copying. They’re thinking.

 

This is where it starts to click.

Come see how reading, writing, and thinking come together in real time.

Skills children can use

Building the habits that support confident learning

Student practicing handwriting with focus and care.

Building strong writing habits

Using Handwriting Without Tears, students practice daily:

  • letter formation
  • spacing
  • capitalization
  • punctuation

As their skills grow, writing becomes clearer, more structured, and more independent.

Kindergarten students using manipulatives to solve math problems.

Math that builds thinkers

Math in Kindergarten isn’t about memorizing. It’s about understanding.

Using hands-on tools like:

  • ten frames
  • counters
  • cubes
  • manipulatives

Students solve problems like:

4 + ? = 8

Not by guessing—but by discovering.

This is where early problem-solving begins.

Children building reading confidence through phonics and word play.

Learning to read with confidence

Students build reading fluency through:

  • sight word recognition
  • phonics patterns
  • interactive word play

Using tools like Secret Stories makes phonics more memorable.

Example:

AU / AW → “best friends who say aw when they see each other.”

Kindergarten students exploring learning through hands-on, values-rich classroom activities.

Real life connection

Where learning comes alive

Academic learning connects across subjects and into real life.

Examples include:

  • Parshat Noach → floating and sinking experiments
  • Tu B’Shvat → planting and growth
  • Rosh Hashanah → bees, hives, and community

Students don’t just learn topics. They experience them.

Beyond the classroom

Learning beyond the classroom

Kindergarten field trip experience connected to classroom learning.
Students exploring and observing during a field trip.
Hands-on educational outing for Kindergarten students.
Student work showing growth in writing and independence over time.

Beyond the classroom

Learning extends into the world through:

  • the aquarium
  • the zoo
  • Centennial Farm
  • Discovery Cube

These experiences reinforce what students are already exploring in class.

Kindergarten students participating in a meaningful mitzvah project.

Where learning meets purpose

Kindergarten students participate in meaningful mitzvah projects.

For example:

Through Reach Out and Read, students:

  • read and review books
  • count and organize donations
  • group books in sets of ten

Math, literacy, and kindness all work together.

Visible growth

You’ll see the growth

Student work showing growth in writing and independence over time.

Each student builds a portfolio throughout the year.

Parents can see:

  • early writing attempts
  • developing skills
  • finished sentences
  • growing independence

The progress is visible.

Student work showing growth in writing and independence over time.

By the end of Kindergarten…

Students leave with:

  • early reading confidence
  • writing independence
  • mathematical thinking
  • curiosity about the world
  • pride in what they can do

They don’t just learn. They see what they are capable of.

Academic Growth.    Emotional Safety.    Parent Trust.

Here’s what that looks like in action:

 

 

You’ll feel it the moment you walk in

Come see what this looks like in real classrooms, with real students.