Leo Baeck Day School | |
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Location | |
Ontario Canada |
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Information | |
School type | Jewish day school |
Religious affiliation(s) | Reform Judaism |
Founded | 1974 |
Rabbi | Noam Katz |
Head of school | Eric Petersiel |
Grades | Preschool-8 |
Enrollment | 850 (2015-2016 school year) |
Language | English, Hebrew, French |
Color(s) | Blue, Green, White, Yellow |
Website | www |
South Campus | |
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Address | |
501 Arlington Ave Toronto, Ontario, M6C 3A4 Canada |
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Information | |
Principal | Rochelle Chester |
North Campus | |
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Address | |
36 Atkinson Ave Thornhill, Ontario, L4J 8C9 Canada |
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Information | |
Principal | Yvette Burke |
The Leo Baeck Day School is a Greater Toronto Area Reform Jewish day school in Ontario, Canada composed of around nine hundred students from Nursery to Grade Eight. Named in honour of Rabbi Leo Baeck, it has two campuses in Thornhill and Toronto.
Leo Baeck is the only Jewish IB (International Baccalaureate) World School and the largest Reform Jewish day school in Canada.
The school is run by the Head of School, Eric Petersiel, a principal at each campus (Yvette Burke at the North Campus and Lauren Sigel at the South Campus), and a Board of Directors, composed of parents and members of the community. The school is affiliated with the Centre for Jewish Education of the UJA Federation of Greater Toronto, the Union for Reform Judaism, and PARDeS, the Progressive Association of Reform Day Schools.
The North Campus includes classes from Nursery through Grade 8 and the South Campus includes Senior Kindergarten through Grade 8. Leo Baeck publishes "Baeck and Call" a bi-annual magazine that showcases the school and its community.
The Leo Baeck Day School opened in 1974 at Toronto’s Temple Emanu-El with fewer than 40 students. The founding parents envisioned a school with a reputation for excellence in both general and Jewish studies, attracting liberal Jewish families, including those who had never before considered Jewish day school education. The School was supported and funded by Reform synagogues across Toronto with the vision that it would model and teach the core values of Reform Judaism. With growth and the need for more room, the School moved to Temple Sinai and then to the portable classroom facilities near York Mills Collegiate. Next, the School moved to Kenton Drive Public School – a surplus Toronto District School Board (TDSB) building.
In 1994, the school found a permanent home at 36 Atkinson Avenue in Thornhill. At the time, the space was built as a centre for Reform Judaism and included facilities for CCRJ and community mikvah (still in use) in addition to the day school. Now called the school’s North Campus, it offers Nursery to Grade 8. In 2011, physical renewal at the North Campus included a new playground, and rebuilt sanctuary, secondary chapel, entrance and new gym floor. The building is also home to Temple Kol Ami.