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Draft:ADRABA Online Jewish High School of Ontario

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  • Comment: You cannot cite Wikipedia as a source on Wikipedia. You probably want wikilinks instead? DoubleGrazing (talk) 16:20, 18 July 2024 (UTC)

The ADRABA online Jewish High School[1] of Ontario (Hebrew[2]: אדרבא), also known as ADRABA, is a private[3] after-school[4] online high school[5] offering accredited high school credits[6] toward an Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD[7]) to students in Toronto[8], London[9], Hamilton[10], Sudbury[11] and other Jewish communities[12] across Ontario[13], established in 2011 by Frank Samuels, Sholom Eisenstat and Dan Aviv. [1] "High-tech Toronto day school plans to open next year"[14]. The Canadian Jewish News[15]. September 12, 2018.

Academic Model

ADRABA is a blended asynchronous[16] and synchronous[17] school. Students register for courses beginning in October through the website adraba.ca. Each course runs for the full academic year. Students participate in live online group classes with the teacher and real-time discussion. For supplemental, self-paced learning, students can access curated interactive online materials. The courses are housed in Google Classroom[18], an integrated learning platform developed in Mountainview, California. The courses have been written by certified teacher and ADRABA founder Dan Aviv and are presented entirely online.

Each Ontario-Ministry-approved[19] course has been designed to integrate Jewish culture and content while fulfilling the Ontario Education Ministry's requirements.

As of October 2024, ADRABA will offer the following courses: Canadian History[20] Since World War 1[21], World Religions[22], World Cultures[23], Media Studies[24], Philosophy[25], and “Chosen Food.”[26]

References

"High-tech Toronto day school plans to open next year"[14]. The Canadian Jewish News[15]. September 12, 2018.

External links

Official website

References

[edit]
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  4. ^ "After-school activity", Wikipedia, 2024-04-30, retrieved 2024-07-18
  5. ^ "Online school", Wikipedia, 2024-07-01, retrieved 2024-07-18
  6. ^ "Ontario Data Catalogue". data.ontario.ca. Retrieved 2024-07-18.
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  14. ^ a b "High-tech Toronto day school plans to open next year". The Canadian Jewish News. 2018-09-12. Retrieved 2024-07-18.
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  17. ^ "Synchronous learning", Wikipedia, 2023-03-10, retrieved 2024-07-18
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