Netivot HaTorah Day School


Netivot HaTorah Day School is a private, coeducational Orthodox Jewish elementary school in Thornhill, Ontario, Canada. As of 2008, it enrolls 600 students from Junior Kindergarten to Grade 8. The school is affiliated with , the educational pillar of the UJA Federation of Greater Toronto.

History

The school was founded in 1984 by Thornhill parents who sought a more religious atmosphere than that found at the decades-old Associated Hebrew Day School in North Toronto. Enrollment increased from 42 students in its first year to 160 students in its second year to nearly 600 students by 2003. The school moved to its present location in 1993. It is now located on the same block as a newer building for the Associated school, as well as the north campus of the Leo Baeck Day School. In 2008 the school opened a preschool branch on the premises of Shaarei Shomayim Congregation in midtown Toronto.

Curriculum

In addition to the regular Ontario curriculum, the school teaches the Hebrew language, Torah subjects, and various other Jewish-related topics.
The curriculum is characterized by its Modern Orthodox and Religious Zionist approach, with an emphasis on "Ivrit b'Ivrit" and teachers who are shlichim. This gives students an authentic taste of modern Israeli language and culture.
Upon completing grade 8, students mostly feed into either Bnei Akiva Schools or Tanenbaum CHAT.
Congregation Ayin L'Tzion, a Modern Orthodox, Zionist minyan, is housed in the school.

Cookbook

In 2003 the Netivot HaTorah parents' organization published a fund-raising cookbook titled Gatherings. Sales of the cookbook netted over $120,000 for the school in its first year of publication.