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Ida Crown Jewish Academy | |
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Address | |
8233 Central Park Avenue , Illinois 60076 United States | |
Coordinates | 42°01′54″N 87°43′04″W / 42.031677°N 87.717774°W |
Information | |
Type | Parochial; Coed |
Motto | Inspiring Bnei and Bnot Torah to thrive in the Modern World |
Religious affiliation(s) | Modern Orthodox |
Established | 1942 |
Dean | Leonard Matanky |
Faculty | 36.0 FTEs |
Enrollment | 216 (as of 2022) |
Student to teacher ratio | 6.8:1 |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Blue, White, and Red |
Mascot | Ace |
Nickname | Ida Crown, ICJA, The Academy |
Rival | Rochelle Zell Jewish High School and Fasman Yeshiva High School |
School fees | $1,430[1] |
Tuition | $25,900 (2022)[1] |
Website | www |
Ida Crown Jewish Academy is a Modern Orthodox Jewish high school in Skokie, Illinois,[2] under the auspicies of the Associated Talmud Torahs. Its current dean is Leonard Matanky.[3] ICJA places emphasis on both Judaic and Secular studies and holds its students to high academic standards. ICJA encourages its students to pursue a year in yeshiva or seminary in Israel before attending college. Ida Crown serves students from all over the Chicago area, including Chicago, Lincolnwood, Skokie, Northbrook, Highland Park, Glencoe, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Des Plaines, and Evanston.
As of the 2021-22 school year, the school had an enrollment of 216 students and 36.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 6.8:1.
Leaders from the Associated Talmud Torahs (ATT) and Hebrew Theological College met in 1942 to address growing educational concerns. The primary problem centered around the fact that many Jewish children began to drop their studies around bar mitzvah time, setting the scene for rampant assimilation and a loss of tradition. They eventually established a plan: to create a high school which taught Judaic studies. Ideally, these students would move on to pursue Jewish higher education.
The school began as Chicago Jewish Academy and was first located on the West side on the corner of Douglas Blvd. and St. Louis Ave. It was a coeducational junior high school with grades 6-10, subsequent grades were added with each upcoming year. The school became a complete four-year secondary school in September, 1945. The first Commencement ceremony took place in June 1946.
By that time, the school outgrew its facilities. The ATT purchased the building of the Metropolitan Masonic Temple in the Garfield Park area; the school moved to the building in 1947. The three-story building was remodeled during the two-year waiting period to accommodate the needs of an academy.
Despite ample room and much progress, the West side of Chicago began to deteriorate as a whole by the early 1960s. The Academy was forced by virtue of circumstances to relocate in 1961 to the Torah Center. The move helped catalyze the institution of a new branch, a yeshiva; a section of the high school for boys, which included intensified Talmudic studies. To satisfy the needs of parents and help hinder overcrowding, a third branch, a Girls' school, was established in September 1967.
The Chicago Jewish Academy made another move in 1968 due to overcrowding. To fund the move, the ATT proposed a campaign to raise funds for a building to house up to 400 students. This building, in the West Ridge area, a center of Jewish community regionally, was named the Ida Crown Jewish Academy, after a generous donation from the Crown family.[4]
Later, the Academy would drop its junior high school, and both branches became their own separate Jewish high schools. The Yeshiva became Fasman Yeshiva High School, in Skokie, and the Girls' School became Hannah Sacks Bais Yaakov. Still, the atmosphere and philosophy has generally remained the same over more than fifty years of progress.
Ida Crown Jewish Academy made another move, this time to Skokie, to satisfy a student body that is primarily from the North Shore area and to address overcrowding at the current building. The building officially opened for learning on January 4, 2016.
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This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (October 2021) |