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Private high school in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Frisch School, also known as Yeshivat Frisch /frɪʃ/, is a coeducational, Modern Orthodox, yeshiva high school located in Paramus, in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was founded in 1972 by Rabbi Menachem Meier and Alfred Frisch. The school primarily serves the Jewish communities of northern New Jersey and New York.
Frisch School | |
---|---|
Address | |
120 West Century Road , , 07652 United States | |
Coordinates | 40.934173°N 74.080172°W |
Information | |
Type | Private High School, Yeshiva |
Motto | Cougars Run Together |
Established | 1972 |
Founder | R. Menachem Meier and Alfred Frisch |
NCES School ID | 00868382[1] |
Principal | Rabbi Eli Ciner[2] |
Faculty | 94 FTEs[1] |
Grades | 9 – 12 |
Enrollment | 923 (as of 2021–22)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 9.8:1[1] |
Color(s) | Red and white[3] |
Team name | Cougars[3] |
Accreditation | Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools |
Newspaper | The Paw Print |
Website | www |
The school is named for founder Alfred Frisch, who owned the land on which the original campus was situated prior to the school's inception in 1972. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools since 1992. Its accreditation expires in 2029.[4] Over the last ten years, under the current administration, the student population has grown from 580 to nearly 1000 students.
Frisch School is located at 120 West Century Road in Paramus. The campus has 41 classrooms, a learning center, six science laboratories, gymnasium, library, music and art studios, a Beit Midrash, a makerspace (fab lab), and a publications room. Outdoors, the campus has a softball field, tennis courts, a basketball-hockey, and a soccer field encircled by a running track.[5] The campus is named in honor of Henry Swieca, who donated the campus.
Founded in 1972 by Rabbi Menachem Meier and Alfred Frisch, the school had been located at E. 243 Frisch Court in Paramus, on a 7-acre (28,000 m2) plot of land.[6]
For the 2007–08 school year, Frisch moved to 120 West Century Road in Paramus. Frisch purchased this site, 14 acres (57,000 m2) of land and an 115,000-square-foot (10,700 m2) office building, and renovated what had been an office building, constructing an 25,000-square-foot (2,300 m2) addition.[7] The campus is named in honor of Henry Swieca, who donated the campus. The former Frisch building was sold in 2015 to the school Ben Porat Yosef.[8]
Frisch offers a dual curriculum of Judaic and secular studies. Incoming students choose between eleven specialty tracks: Art; Beit Midrash; Culinary Arts and Food Science; Engineering; Entrepreneurship; Medical Sciences; Music; Philosophy, Politics and Economics; Sports Management and Business Analytics; World Languages; and Writing. Each track provides specialized academic/vocational training.[9]
The school was re-accredited by the Middle States Association Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools in 2020 and is now accredited through January 2029.[10][11]
Most of the students are from the Jewish communities of northern New Jersey and New York, with some commuting from Central New Jersey.
As of the 2021–22 school year, the school had an enrollment of 923 students and 94 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 9.8:1. The school's student body was 99.2% (916) White, 0.7% (6) Asian and 0.1% (1) Black.[1]
The school says it has over 100 student clubs, in areas including the arts, languages, sciences, leadership and other interests.[12][13]
There are 25 athletic teams and seven athletic clubs in total. More than 70 percent of students participate on one or more of the sports teams and clubs. There are four basketball teams, one baseball team, two boys floor hockey teams, one girls floor hockey team, and one boys wrestling team, which consecutively won five Wittenberg wrestling titles. There are three volleyball teams – the girls volleyball teams have won the most championship games of any yeshiva volleyball team - three soccer teams, two swimming teams, three softball teams, one bowling team, and two track teams, among others. Frisch also has the first-ever yeshiva ice hockey team, which, in its first year of existence, qualified for the NJ state tournament.[14] Frisch competes in ice hockey under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.[3][15] In 2016, half of Frisch's Yeshiva League sports teams qualified for the championships, and six teams won the championships.
The baseball team won three consecutive Metropolitan Yeshiva High School Athletic League titles (2014, 2015, 2016),[16][17][18] and won the Columbus Baseball Invitational yeshiva high school tournament, dubbed the "Jewish World Series", in each of 2016 and 2017.[19][20]
In 2015, Frisch won the Red Sarachek Tournament hosted by Yeshiva University for the first time. After losing in the championship game in 2013 and 2014, they defeated the Hebrew Academy of the Five Towns and Rockaway by a score of 75–73 in triple-overtime to claim the title.[21] In 2017, Frisch came back and won the Sarachek Tournament, defeating the Shalhevet Firehawks (of Los Angeles) by a score of 49–47 in the tournament final.[22]
In 2016, Frisch began hosting the Wittenberg Wrestling Tournament, after Yeshiva University announced that it would no longer host the annual event.[23]
The ice hockey team won the McMullen Cup and Monsignor Kelly Cup in 2018.[24] The team won the McMullen Cup in 2021 after defeating Scotch Plains-Fanwood High School by a score of 2-1 in the tournament final.[25]
A Chesed Society coordinates community projects throughout the year.[26] Frisch students run a winter camp for children with special needs who have off from public school during the winter break week.[27]
In 2018, students were invited to participate in a voluntary letter writing campaign thanking President Trump if they "believe[d] that the president's decision was correct" regarding the relocation the U.S Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. They were informed of the letter-writing campaign by the school's then-director of Israel education and faculty adviser of the school's Israel advocacy club, Rabbi David Sher. However, the letter-writing campaign itself was initiated by the Israel Advocacy organization NORPAC. Instructions for participating in the campaign included a reminder to "sign your name at the bottom," while NORPAC's boiler-plate letter praised the president's "courageous leadership" for the embassy decision.[45] Sher's email stated twice that the campaign was voluntary.[46]
The email was sent to students without prior parental consent, and some parents at the school lodged complaints in private forums, stating that the move was "sycophantic" and that the school should be "apolitical" and not attempt to "normalize Trump."[47] Journalists at Ha'aretz and Newsweek got wind of this disapproval, and published articles implying that the school forced or strongly urged all students to write letters praising Trump.[46][48]
The school principal, Rabbi Eli Ciner, noted that these private conversations were leaked to the press also without parental consent.[49] Ciner acknowledged that parents who did not agree with Trump complained, though stressed that the campaign was "completely voluntary" and that expression of different political opinions was an expression of democracy [50] In a statement to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Ciner stated, “As a religious Zionist school, we encourage our students as civic minded American citizens to write to the administration when they agree or disagree with the government’s policies regarding the State of Israel. In this particular case, many of our students strongly supported the president’s decision recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.” [46]
A columnist for Jewish Telegraphic Agency wrote regarding the letter writing campaign press coverage that "behaviors considered typical going back decades" were "distorted by their proximity to the 45th president" in this particular case, commenting that:
Missing in much of the reporting was the fact that like much of the mainstream Jewish community, most Jewish schools see teaching about and advocating for Israel a central part of their mission and a key to instilling Jewish identity. If anything, Israel advocacy training has increased as Jewish organizations invest more resources in fighting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement aimed at Israel.[46]
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