tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post8855534048261284252..comments2024-03-28T21:53:53.990+02:00Comments on Life in Israel: Soon To Be Recognized: BA In Torah StudiesRafi G.http://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-63164552810523814452011-01-30T01:24:00.401+02:002011-01-30T01:24:00.401+02:00I think the ones who commented that it won't b...I think the ones who commented that it won't be accepted in the haredi world are correct, which is too bad. <br /><br />The value employers place on having a degree is more than just the education itself. After all, what does having a degree in ancient French poetry have to do with being able to do a particular job? The answer is that earning a degree demonstrates one's commitment to setting goal and seeing it through. It demonstrates a person's ability to think, analyze, manage his / her time and a modicum of organizational skills. It shows a level of maturity since a degree graduate did not seek the easiest way out. These are valuable qualities in a person overall, and also reflects on their ability to learn and be trained for a job. If I were hiring, I would have a better first impression about a degree graduate, even in ancient French poetry, than someone with just a high school diploma, even if his / her degree was not related to my industry. <br /><br />But I want to explain something to Rachel who thinks Gemara is only one subject. Gemara in and of itself is not a subject. It's the textbook, if you will. Each mesechet is a course on a different subject. Topics include agriculture, sacrifices, spiritual purity and impurity, real estate law, employment law, landlord and tenant relations, family law, rules of evidence, oaths and witnesses, torts and contracts, criminal justice, as well as other topics such as kashrut, Shabbat and the holidays. <br /><br />Completing any one of these is an achievement certainly no less than completing a university course. <br /><br />Someone who has completed and demonstrates adequate knowledge (pass an exam) in these "courses" has also demonstrated commitment to achieving a goal, the ability to think and analyze, and many of the other qualities employers value. <br /><br />With all due respect to Chrétien de Troyes, Étienne Jodelle and Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, which graduate would you hire?Wanna Saabhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11564440024185263043noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-68849491584044802011-01-28T16:38:33.972+02:002011-01-28T16:38:33.972+02:001. IF this is to happen, then the yeshivot should...1. IF this is to happen, then the yeshivot should have to meet some standards. No other academic institution is recognized for granting degrees without meeting defined standards. Most of the hareidi yeshivot have no standards in place that could be monitored and by which student's progress could be measured.<br /><br />2. There already are yeshivot in Israel that give legitimate degrees. Oh, wait - they're all Zionist and went through rigorous accreditation processes, such as the college at Har Etzion and its extensions/branches.<br /><br />3. Many of the BAs given in the American yeshivas are bogus. Many of them are not accredited, nor state authorized; and those BAs (in those cases) are typically useful in limited applications. Some of those places just make it up, just as they give themselves ridiculous names in English which include words like 'university'.<br /><br />4. When I starting teaching school in Israel in the 80s, a young rav with a heter horaah was recognized and paid as having a degree. Oh, wait - the heter horaah was from the Rabbanut Rashit, who has rigorous standards (requires a lot more than many other 'smichas'), and the teaching cert had to be a state recognized cert from an accredited teacher's seminary like Shaalvim and other yeshivot had back then (oh, those Zionist yeshivot again...)<br /><br />So, much of this comes down to - the opportunity is already there. There are MANY yeshiva guys with degrees and a heter horaah. But one has to be willing to work with the existing system and most importantly, meet defined, measurable, rigorous standards. That is something that the haredi public hasn't been willing to do; but there is no real reason to change the system.Mordechai Y. Scherhttp://www.kolberamah.orgnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-3730656903846025682011-01-27T21:09:21.189+02:002011-01-27T21:09:21.189+02:00Unfortunately the Israeli/European university syst...Unfortunately the Israeli/European university system isn't like the US, otherwise I'd say hey most "real" BA's aren't that rigorous so why would the yeshiva equivalent need to be?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-84411887659664663822011-01-27T11:10:19.000+02:002011-01-27T11:10:19.000+02:00As you write Rafi "Obviously, if it will be a...As you write Rafi "Obviously, if it will be allowed, it will need to be monitored, and regulations set in place" etc.<br /><br />This guarantees the unworkability of it. The rabbis will never accept outside interference. They would not like Torah to be considered as academic studies.Obviously what this avrech had in mind as well as those who would look for recognition of Torah studies is that anybody who learned X years in Yeshiva should be considered as if he has fulfilled the requirements of a BA without actually having one even on the paper.bohr salinonoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-35253829229679355052011-01-26T22:42:43.888+02:002011-01-26T22:42:43.888+02:00No, Rafi. No American university that's worth...No, Rafi. No American university that's worth anything gives a degree in a subject and doesn't require any courses in subject matter outside the major field of study.<br /><br /><i>if the authorities ever realized this they would revoke this degree</i><br /><br />Should religious people continue to take advantage of the fact that the authorities don't know this? Another classic example of smart Jews pulling the wool over the eyes of the (gullible or evil) authorities.<br /><br />Taking advantage of an unregulated BTL doesn't sound ethical to me. I don't care if these guys are the smartest in their law school classes (by the way, they aren't, they just think they are).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-3043715963224544482011-01-26T20:12:00.533+02:002011-01-26T20:12:00.533+02:00in fact in the us the btl system is not regulated,...in fact in the us the btl system is not regulated, and if the authorities ever realized this they would revoke this degree. furthermore, law schools are clamping down on yeshiva degrees, making it harder to get into law school with a yeshiva degree.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-74444100642354740322011-01-26T14:47:27.308+02:002011-01-26T14:47:27.308+02:00in the yeshivas in the US it is common that many o...in the yeshivas in the US it is common that many of them give a BA in Judaic Studies. some of them give other courses to fill other requirements, and some dont. When you then apply for college with your degree, some will accept it as is, and others might make you take prep courses, depending on what your transcripts sayRafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-13246600370722908842011-01-26T14:39:10.045+02:002011-01-26T14:39:10.045+02:00Sitting and studying one particular subject does n...Sitting and studying one particular subject does not necessarily a degree make. <br /><br />I am not sure how degrees work here, but I know in North America, most degrees have breadth requirements to ensure a somewhat well rounded education that includes basic skills. I know at the university I went to a Judaic Studies degree was an option (in fact, I graduated with one) but you were also required a humanities course, a social science, a natural science, and a course with an "How to write and essay and research" component. <br /><br />Would something like that be likely to be included or is it an all gemarah all the time sort of system that would not really prepare a student for, say a masters in business.Rachelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10006477385560302312noreply@blogger.com