Schechter’s Graduate School remains the only academic institution in Israel devoted primarily to the teaching of Jewish Studies. Through multiple tracks, the Graduate School provides cutting-edge educational opportunities for professionals who seek meaning in their Jewish identity through interdisciplinary study, and are seeking the highest academic standards. Together, the School’s students and graduates form a network of highly motivated individuals throughout Israel. They are agents of change, influencing Israeli society as it forges a new increasingly diverse, multicultural, and pluralistic identity.
The Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies offers Israel’s largest M.A. program in the field. Graduates of the program will be awarded an M.A. degree in Jewish Studies recognized by Israel’s Council for Higher Education. Classes are held in Jerusalem in Hebrew. For more information in Hebrew and for registration, click here. We also offer non-degree, adult-education courses, online and in-person, in English.
Students in the M.A. program can choose from the following tracks:
Our students can also study in these special programs:
Incubator for Creative Jewish Education Program
Formerly YAMAH (Hebrew acronym for Creativity, Educational Leadership, and Jewish Renewal), this Incubator program trains educators to create innovative pedagogies for studying Judaism via encounters between Jewish sources and education. The program diagnoses fundamental issues in Israeli education with modern research tools, focusing on the role of Jewish education in shaping Israeli society. It experiments with creative tools available to educators today — from computer animation through bibliotherapy to musical composition. The program has fieldtrips in Israel, a study mission to the United States, and exposure to creative educators and groundbreaking models. The program is a joint initiative of TALI and the Schechter Institute thereby enabling students to explore professional development, Jewish education and Jewish studies.
Mashiv Ha’Ruach
The Mashiv Ha’Ruach Spiritual Care training program is the core of Schechter’s CPE (Clinical Pastoral Education) initiative. Graduates will receive an MA Degree in Jewish studies, with the opportunity to study either in the Jewish Thought or Judaism in the Arts track, and a certificate in spiritual care. This academic program’s classes focus on theological and existential themes within the disciplines of spiritual care and in Jewish sources. The program’s practical training requires a minimum of 400 hours work in clinical settings like medical or geriatric facilities. Students also receive individual and group supervision from certified spiritual caregivers and educators. Mashiv Ha’Ruach is organized in cooperation with Kashouvot, Israel’s largest spiritual care organization.
Schechter’s Leadership Program: Community-based Jewish Beit Midrash Formerly known as Mishlei, this is a two-year program that culminates in an M.A. degree in Jewish Studies focusing on Talmud and Halakhah, Community Leadership and Jewish Identity. The program strengthens the connection between the academic study of Judaism and practical community work. The diverse student body is a microcosm of Israeli society, with many of its graduates engaged in leadership roles.
Interdisciplinary Track
Formerly named Meirav, this interdisciplinary M.A. track comprises studies of a variety of Jewish subjects, providing a wide-ranging perspective, utilizing diverse types of Jewish texts written and communicated throughout the generations. The program can be completed in a single or two academic years, using two summer semesters, two regular semesters, and evening off-campus courses via Zoom.
The track includes courses in: Midrash & Aggada, History of the Jewish People, Modern Forms of Jewish Identity, Bible, Jewish Thought, Jewish Art History, and Beit Midrash textual study from the Bible to Modern Jewish Literature.
In just two years, Schechter has seen phenomenal growth in its five groundbreaking certificate programs that help strengthen resilience by focusing on creative healing modalities. This approach produces a healing – Jewish identity nexus that resonates deeply with Israelis from all different communities and walks of life.
Marpeh
in the Gaza-border town of Ofakim and Marpeh in the northern Galilee town of Kiryat Shmona. It is designed to help replenish the emotional and psychological strength of individuals in leadership positions within “the helping professions,” who have worked tirelessly to support their students, clients, patients, employees and communities in Israel’s war ravaged North and South. It enables them to invest in a Jewish learning-based, creative healing process so they can continue to do their invaluable work across all sectors in northern Israel.
Sfat HaNefesh
Sfat HaNefesh is intended for professionals and managers working with populations dealing with trauma, loss, or crisis. It is especially suited for:
Participants learn applicable skills that enhance their professional and personal capacities, while also contributing to more attentive and sensitive professional environments—spaces that foster growth and hope.
Bibliotherapy Certificate Program
The program opened in the spring of 2024, was created to provide educators with the pedagogic tools to offer their students interactive, engaging learning of the Jewish texts. In large part, this program was created to answer needs and furnish a Jewish education response to the trauma and mental health crises precipitated by the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7th. Bibliotherapy brings Jewish sources to life and gives students a creative opportunity to connect with Jewish stories, themes and messages in a personal, dynamic way. By looking at classic Jewish texts and how they speak to us today, training in Bibliotherapy is a relevant Jewish framework for addressing these incredibly challenging times.
Creating Hope – Psychodrama Certificate Program
Creating Hope is a new certification program for professional educators, social workers, educational staff and others to upgrade their professional capabilities with the tools of Psychodrama integrated with the inner life of Jewish texts.
Psychodrama is a group psychotherapy centered on human drama in action. It assists a person create his/her own authentic voice to reveal inner strengths. The dramatic healing process is constructed in “Psychodramatic stage’s safe space,” enabling a person to move from fragmentation to recuperation and growth. This process is based on psychodynamic methods and on the Jewish perspective of creating hope, based on the idea of Unity: body/Nefesh/Neshama.
This program is in collaboration with the Jerusalem Institute for Psychodrama.
Zion and the Diaspora in the Past, Present and Future: Social, Cultural and Educational Aspects is a joint interdisciplinary research project and think tank, headed by Schechter’s Prof. Yossi Turner and comprised of the highest level of scholars and intellectuals from Israel and the Diaspora. It meets a number of times a year.
The Center for Women in Jewish Law has been devoted to researching, publishing and educating the public on the rights of women from the perspective of the Jewish legal tradition. Its publications, including the seven-issue Hebrew-English Jewish Law Watch, and its magnum opus Za’akat Dalot (The Cry of the Wretched): Halakhic Solutions for the Agunot of our Time, has advanced Jewish law advocacy research in the area of agunot (women whose husbands refuse them a writ of divorce). The Center has also published The Status of Women in Jewish Law: Responsa (in Hebrew and English editions), and a series of booklets, To Learn and To Teach (in five languages), which provides a religious/legal basis for egalitarianism within Jewish tradition. Newest publications include Ask the Rabbi, a collection of responsa written by two women rabbis and Taking the Plunge: A Practical and Spiritual Guide to the Mikveh. All books may be purchased online at the Schechter Catalog.
The Center for Judaism and the Arts enriches the culture of Jewish life in Israel. Its central educational initiative is the TALI Virtual Midrash website, an electronic collection of fine and folk Art on Biblical themes that has uploaded over 1,100 images related to Biblical subjects and catalogued them in English and Hebrew, with cross reference search capabilities by artist, theme, time period and topical essays. The site was created by Schechter faculty member Dr. Jo Milgrom and by Dr. Joel Duman.
The Institute of Applied Halakhah was founded in 1997 in order to create a library of halakhic literature in Hebrew, English, Russian and other languages to help foster the study and observance of halakhah. The Institute publishes responsa, bibliographies, guides to practical halakhah, and books on the philosophy of Jewish law, and also hosts a website in Hebrew and English, Responsa for Today. The Institute’s books can be purchased here.
The Midrash Project at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies is publishing a series of books on midrash, including critical editions of at least eight midrashim. The series is edited by Profs. David Golinkin and Shamma Friedman. Each critical edition presents the midrash based on the best manuscript, and includes selected variant readings, reference to parallel sources in Rabbinic literature, and a critical commentary.
Prof. Doron Bar
Land of Israel Studies
Prof. Moshe Benovitz
Talmud, Jewish Law
Prof. Ari Ackerman
President, Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, Associate Professor for Jewish Philosophy and Jewish Education
Rabbi Prof. David Frankel
Associate Professor of Bible
Dr. Sarah Schwartz
Dean, Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, Senior Lecturer, Bible Studies
Dr. Tamar Kadari
Senior Lecturer, Midrash, Judaism and the Arts
Dr. Noa Yuval-Hacham
Lecturer, Land of Israel Studies, Judaism and the Arts
Dr. Gila Vachman
Lecturer, Midrash; Coordinator of Meitivey Program, Tel Aviv
Dr. Ronit Steinberg
Lecturer, Art History, Modern and Jewish Art, Academic Advisor for Gender and Feminism tracks
Dr. Einat Ramon
Marpeh Director; Jewish Thought, Women's Studies
Dr. Marva Shalev-Marom
Golinkin Chair in TALI Jewish Education at the Schechter Institute
Dr. Avraham Yoskovich
Head, the Land of Israel and Jewish Thought MA Tracks
Dr. Etka Liebowitz
Director, Adult Education and Grants Coordinator
Prof. Shmuel Glick
Lecturer, Halakhic Literature and Development of Jewish Education
Prof. Eliezer Hadad
Lecturer, Jewish Thought
Dr. Moriah Beer-Shikri
Lecturer, Talmud & Rabbinic Literature
Dr. Roi Biti
Lecturer, Kabbalah, Jewish Mysticism, Hassidut
Dr. Peri Sinclair
The Susan and Scott Shay TALI Director General
Rabbi Dr. Reb Mimi Feigelson
Mashpiah Ruchanit
Dr. Hannah Davidson
Lecturer, Medieval Jewish History
Dr. Adi Mirili
Lecturer, Bible, Bible Instruction
Rabbi Arie Hasit
Associate Dean, Schechter Rabbinical Seminary
Dr. Anat Shapira Lavi
Lecturer, Midrash & Aggadah
Dr. Gabriel Abensour
Lecturer, Jewish History in North Africa
Dr. Ariel Picard
Lecturer, Aggadah and Jewish Thought
Dr. Racheli Frisch
Lecturer, Biblical Literature
Dr. Miriam Samet
Lecturer, History of Jewish Education
Dr. Nachshon Szanton
Lecturer, Jerusalem and Land of Israel Studies
Dr. Eyal Davidson
Lecturer, Jerusalem and Land of Israel Studies
Dr. Sharon Livne
Lecturer, Modern Jewish History and Education
Dr. Milka Rubin
Lecturer, Jerusalem and Land of Israel Studies
Dr. Rony Klein
Lecturer, Jewish Thought
Dr. Tami Salmon Mack
Lecturer, Modern Jewish History and Jewish Thought
Dr. Renana Ravitsky Pilzer
Lecturer, Jewish Studies and Gender
Dr. Yehuda Tzur
Lecturer, Modern Israel
Dr. Irina Chernetsky
Lecturer, Judaism and the Arts
Rabbi Valerie Stessin
Lecturer and head of Mashiv Ha’Ruach Spiritual Care program
Dr. Mordy Miller
Lecturer, Modern Jewish Thought
Dr. Shimon Israeli
Lecturer, Modern Jewish Thought
Dr. Carmel Vaisman
Lecturer, Modern Jewish Thought
Dr. Gideon Elazar
Lecturer, Comparative Religions
Eliad Moreh-Rosenberg
Lecturer, Judaism and the Arts
Emanuel Cohn
Lecturer, Judaism and the Arts
Ariella Amar
Lecturer, Judaism and the Arts
Regev Ben David
Lecturer, Modern Israel
Yael Israel
Lecturer, Mashiv Ha’Ruach Spiritual Care program
Rabbi Prof. David Golinkin
President Emeritus, The Schechter Institutes, INC.
Prof. Renée Levine Melammed
Jewish History, Women's Studies and Sephardic Jewry (Emeritus)
Dr. Yair Paz
Senior Lecturer, Land of Israel Studies (Emeritus)
Rabbi Prof. Shamma Friedman
Talmud (Emeritus)
Dr. Shula Laderman
Lecturer of Judaism and the Arts (Emeritus)
Prof. Bat-Sheva Margalit Stern
Women's Studies, Jewish History (Emeritus)
Prof. Yossi Turner
Jewish Thought and Philosophy (Emeritus)
Dr. Paul Mandel
Senior Lecturer, Midrash and Aggadah, Talmud, Hermeneutics, and Second Temple Literature (Emeritus)
* Ex-officio
** Honorary member
Prof. Land of Israel Studies
Our students and graduates form a strong country-wide network. Active, intellectually curious, community minded, they are agents of change who influence Israeli society as it forges an increasingly diverse, multicultural, and pluralistic identity.
Senior Lecturer, Midrash and Judaism and the Arts at Schechter Institute's Graduate School
Studying at Schechter is also a way, from the academic perspective, to connect people to their roots. There is a deep thirst for learning Judaism, it draws people back to their grandparents, their roots. Students are looking for connection and they find us. And by offering rich academic knowledge of Jewish history and culture, we help them find themselves.
Principal and educator in Ofakim over 45 years, today Deputy Mayor of Ofakim; Schechter M.A. graduate in Jewish Women’s Studies
At Schechter, we learned about the different streams in Judaism. This is where religious pluralism came to life for me. I also realized how crucial it is to build a strong Jewish identity curriculum within our school, especially for the many students who came from the FSU, where they had little or no Jewish background.