Faculty and Staff Coronavirus Information

Updated: May 25, 2021

Latest Messages


April 7, 2021

Fall Semester Plans Update from Chancellor Shuly Rubin Schwartz

Dear JTS Community,

As we enter the last weeks of the semester, I want to thank you—students, faculty, and staff—for all you’ve done, in the face of a historic global pandemic, to help us complete the academic year with great success.

Though most of us remain physically separate, we have maintained the connections that bind us. We have found new ways to study and work together, to socialize and celebrate, to bring JTS learning to new audiences, and to serve and care for our community and the communities around us. At the same time, we’ve missed the in-person conversations, the spontaneous exchange of ideas, the experience of being together that enhances our work and study in invisible yet tangible ways.

Thankfully, the arrival and distribution of life-saving vaccines has enabled the hope that we can plan realistically to return to campus. If all goes well, this means that we will open for in-person classes and residential life in the fall, while continuing to take all necessary precautions to maintain the safety of our community. After the past year, we all know that circumstances can change quickly and could yet force us to revise our best-laid plans. But right now, we are in the first stage of preparing for a full campus re-opening, as are our partners at Columbia and Barnard. 

The challenges of the past year, though not welcome, have taught us a great deal. At first our campus was closed to all but essential employees, while all other work and all classes went online. Gradually, we were able to open our doors safely on a limited basis to staff, faculty, and students who wanted to use our campus facilities. This spring, we welcomed back a small number of students to our residence hall. The Library re-opened. And we held a small number of class sessions outdoors. How thrilling it was to see colleagues face to face after so many months of solely virtual engagement. And how wonderful it was to hear the sounds of learning through my office window! Thanks to all of these experiences, I believe we are now well-prepared to oversee a larger re-opening of campus in the fall. I am also heartened to know that we can count on our staff and students to take seriously the health precautions needed to maintain a safe environment.

This is only the first of many communications you will receive about the fall semester. I know you already have numerous questions, and I ask you to please hold them for the moment. We are just beginning to develop our fall plan and to address the myriad issues that must be resolved as part of a safe re-opening. I assure you that we will be in touch just as soon as we know more.

Right now, my heart is full at the thought of seeing all of you in person and enabling everyone in the JTS community to join together on our beautifully renovated campus.

Thank you all again for your resilience, your hard work, and the caring support you have shown one another. You have allowed JTS to thrive during this extraordinarily challenging time.

Sincerely, 

Shuly Rubin Schwartz
Chancellor

November 6, 2021

Spring 2021 Classes Will Be Offered Entirely Online

Dear JTS Community,

I know that many of you are eager for information about what the next semester at JTS will look like. All of us in the administration share that eagerness and have been working to give you the information you need in a timely way. Further updates will be provided in coming weeks, but we do wish to share the decision that for the spring 2021 semester, all JTS courses will be offered entirely online.

We came to this decision after weighing several factors and, as always, prioritizing the health and safety of our community. Certainly, one important factor we considered was the uptick in coronavirus infections throughout the country and uncertainty about the winter ahead. We also looked closely at our fall semester experience with online instruction. The results show clearly that since beginning classes in September, our faculty and students have displayed remarkable creativity, commitment, and resilience in making online learning the rich and meaningful experience that characterizes a JTS education. Taken together, these factors argued strongly for maintaining a model of full online instruction.

Our faculty members are now planning and designing courses for the spring and continuing to work with education technology specialists to further enrich their classes for the online environment. We are also using the suggestions from students and faculty based on this semester’s course offerings to continue enhancing the instructional experience.

Depending on health and safety conditions in the spring, we will permit small, occasional in-person class sessions on the JTS campus. Whether to hold these will depend on student and faculty interest and availability in any specific course. If such sessions do occur, they will be entirely optional, and all class sessions will continue to be offered online. As during this semester, anyone visiting the campus will be required to follow all health and safety protocols in place at the time.

Over the next couple of weeks, you can expect to receive additional information with details about other aspects of our spring semester planning. We know you are eager for this information, and we will provide it as quickly as possible.

I remind you that spring term will begin January 11, 2021. Here is the spring academic calendar.

I hope you have a successful and enjoyable continuation of the fall semester, followed by a well-deserved winter break. Wherever you are, please accept my sincere wish that you and your entire family are healthy and safe.

Sincerely,

Stephen Garfinkel
Acting Provost

August 18

No Requirement for Faculty and Staff To Be Tested for Covid-19

Dear Faculty and Staff,

In light of Chancellor Schwartz’s announcement of August 14, specifically that students would not be returning to campus for the fall semester, we have modified our previous requirement for all faculty and staff to be tested for Covid-19 prior to their first return to campus.  

The updated policy statement is as follows:

JTS will encourage each employee returning to campus to get a COVID diagnostic test.

All faculty and staff are encouraged, but not required, to be tested for Covid-19 prior to their first return to campus. There will be no requirement for proof or documentation for such tests.

Please let either Jim Esposito or me know if you have any questions.

Stay safe and healthy!

Diana Torres-Petrilli
Chief Human Resources Officer

James Esposito
Director of Operations, Facilities M​anagement

August 6 

Update on Fall Operations

This message provides details for the gradual return of staff and faculty as well as building and community protocols.

Dear JTS Community,

As we anticipate welcoming students and employees to JTS for the fall semester, we want to let you know about the numerous steps we are taking to help protect the health and safety of the JTS community, our neighbors, and all who enter our campus. We have developed a plan that follows the guidance issued by New York State and the latest recommendations of public health experts. As circumstances change, we may need to amend our protocols, but our priority is and will remain protecting the health and safety of students, faculty, staff, and our surrounding community. 

Over the last few months, we have witnessed more than ever what a caring and connected community we share at JTS. This concern for the welfare of others is what makes this community so special, and it is what makes us optimistic that, barring a change in the trajectory of the pandemic, we will be able to implement a gradual and safe return of employees to campus beginning August 17.

Below are the details of our plan. As always, we hope you and your loved ones stay well, and we thank you for the contribution each of you makes every day toward fulfilling the mission of this great institution.

Sincerely,

Diana Torres-Petrilli
Chief Human Resources Officer

James Esposito
Director of Operations, Facilities Management

Plan for Fall Operations 

JTS will implement a comprehensive screening and prevention policy to minimize the risks presented by COVID-19
.

JTS will require each employee returning to campus to get a COVID diagnostic test.

JTS will grant supervisors discretion in deciding when their employees start returning to campus.

JTS will conduct heightened cleaning and safety protocols throughout the campus.

JTS will phase in the return of employees to campus safely and gradually.

JTS will be prepared in the event an employee is diagnosed with COVID-19.

JTS will be prepared in the event an employee exhibits COVID-19 symptoms.

JTS will ensure that all organizations housed at JTS are similarly prepared.

We will require that each affiliate organization housed on campus establish a COVID-19 action plan for its employees and workspaces before those employees are permitted to return. This includes:

JTS will consider additional steps for members of vulnerable populations.

We are aware that according to public health authorities, some populations are more vulnerable than others to becoming severely ill if they contract COVID-19. For those employees deemed more vulnerable, their circumstances will be considered for accommodations on a case-by-case basis. Employees should consult with their supervisor, who will consult with the office of Human Resources.

Safeguarding Your Health

You have an important role to play in maintaining a safe workplace and community, and we ask each employee to do their part. Please remember to follow the health and safety practices listed below. We will also invite you to watch a video with information about these practices to help guide you as you return to campus. 

Contact your medical provider immediately if you are experiencing the following known symptoms of COVID-19:

Go for a flu shot if you are not already immunized.

Covid-19 Student Information

Updated: January 13, 2022

NOTE: The JTS Counseling Center welcomes students who wish to reach out for assistance at counseling@jtsa.edu or (212) 280-6161. More information here.

Spring Semester

Please make sure to read all details below. 

Latest Messages

COVID-19 Update on Beginning of Spring Semester 2022  

January 12, 2022

Dear JTS students, 

We hope you are having a restful winter break and wish you a healthy and happy 2022. We look forward to welcoming you to campus for the new semester. As always, the health and safety of the JTS community is our highest priority and we continue to appreciate the critical role each student plays in helping protect other students, employees, their families, and the larger community.  

Please read below for a reminder about our COVID-19 booster requirement, additional testing protocols, and updated health measures for the beginning of the spring semester. 

Vaccine and Booster Requirement

All students must be fully vaccinated to enter the JTS campus (except those who have received a formal exemption), and eligible students must have received a booster shot prior to the start of the spring semester or as soon as they are eligible. Deadline for uploading documentation of your booster shot is January 28, 2022 online HERE. More details about the booster requirement may be found HERE 

Please note that the CDC has updated its guidance on booster doses for individuals who received the Pfizer vaccine for their initial doses. They are now eligible for a booster dose five months after their second shot; the previous recommendation had been six months. Click here for more information. The recommendations for individuals who received the Moderna vaccine or Johnson & Johnson vaccine remain unchanged—those individuals are eligible six months after their second shot (Moderna) or two months after their single shot (Johnson & Johnson). 

COVID-19 Testing

Pre-arrival Testing Recommendation

We strongly recommend that all JTS students get a PCR test 48 hours prior to arriving on campus. While this test is not currently required, it may become so depending on public health conditions. Either way, we urge students to schedule a PCR test appointment in advance, ensuring that your return to campus is not delayed or disrupted. Those who test positive are required to isolate for five days and follow guidance of your health care provider before entering campus. Note that at this time, we do not require the results of negative tests from this external testing to be uploaded or submitted—but please report positive test results to your school dean, Residence Life staff and COVIDtesttrace@columbia.edu.  

Gateway Testing Requirement

If You Have a Recent Positive PCR Test 

If you had a PCR positive test in the past 90 days, and reported this to Columbia Health or Barnard, you will be considered compliant with the gateway requirement. Please do not re-test unless directed to do so by a healthcare provider and refer to the testing FAQ on how to submit your documentation in case of a positive test result. 

Note: List College students must continue follow all testing protocols from Columbia or Barnard.  

Columbia Health Testing Locations

Columbia offers testing in five locations, with two sites operating five days per week. University testing appointments open 7-10 days in advance so please plan accordingly. To ensure opportunities to be tested, please book your appointment in advance of your desired testing date, consider all of the potential sites, and remember that it is not possible to add people to a fully booked schedule. On select days, the Lerner Hall location will be offering extended hours. Please note that walk-in testing is not available during January 2022, and tests from non-University sites cannot be used to meet the University-required COVID-19 tests. 

Masks Matter

Changes in Isolation and Quarantine Guidelines 

We want to make sure that all JTS students are aware that New York State, acting on guidance from the CDC, has modified isolation and quarantine as follows. 

Isolation:

Isolation keeps someone who is sick or tested positive for COVID-19 without symptoms away from others, even in their own home. 

Quarantine:

Quarantine separates and restricts the movement of people who were exposed to a contagious disease to see if they become sick.  

Full details can be found on the New York State Department of Health website. 

Gathering/Events and Dining Policies

Please note that JTS related non-academic student gatherings on and off campus are prohibited until the end of January. We hope to loosen our dining and event/gathering restrictions soon after in-person classes begin and when the spread of Omicron has decreased.  

Note for JTS Students Entering Campus for First Time  

We welcome new and returning students joining us on campus for the first time this academic year. In addition to fulfilling the requirements outlined in this e-mail, all students are required to do the following in order to enter campus.  

All JTS students must be fully vaccinated or receive an exemption from JTS in order to enter campus. Vaccination and booster documentation (if eligible) must be submitted HERE or to registrar@jtsa.edu

Students who have not signed the JTS Compact and submitted vaccination proof or applied for an exemption will not be able to access campus for classes or other campus activities.   

Thank you for your continued assistance in helping keep our community as safe as possible. The Student Life and Residence Life staff, deans and Counseling Center remain here to support you. We wish you a healthy and rewarding new semester and look forward to seeing you very soon. As always, please continue to check your JTS e-mail for important, time-sensitive updates. 


L’Shalom,


Sara Horowitz
Dean of Student Life

DECEMBER 23, 2021

SPRING SEMESTER: POLICY ON COVID BOOSTER SHOTS

Dear Students, 

We hope this finds you well and looking forward to a well-deserved winter break. As a reminder, JTS requires all students to receive a COVID-19 booster prior to the start of the spring semester or as soon as they are eligible. Please find follow-up information below and a form to upload your documentation.  

COVID-19 Booster and Eligibility  

Our current vaccination mandate will be expanded to require booster doses for all JTS students, faculty and staff who meet the criteria for eligibility. In general, you are eligible for a booster six months after the last dose of your initial Pfizer or Moderna series (or WHO-authorized vaccine) or two months after the initial J&J vaccination.   

Uploading COVID-19 Booster Documentation 

All eligible students must upload documentation of their booster shot by January 28, 2022 through our COVID-19 Booster Form. Students who are not yet eligible to receive a booster must indicate their date of eligibility on the same form and get their booster as soon as they are eligible. If you have trouble uploading your documentation, please e-mail it to registrar@jtsa.edu. The process for any medical or religious exemption requests remains the same. Please e-mail registrar@jtsa.edu.  

Please note that students must also follow separate instructions provided by Columbia or Barnard regarding uploading booster documentation to their health services. 

Finding a COVID-19 Booster Shot Location 

For many of you, the easiest option for obtaining a booster dose may be in the area where you are spending the winter break. The following websites can help you find a vaccination location. Please bring your CDC vaccination card with you so that the booster may be entered. 

  • TheCOVID Vaccine Finder by State can help you find a convenient location in your community. You may also text your local zip code to 438829 (GETVAX) from your cell phone. You will receive a text with a link re: COVID Vax location information.  

As always, please check your JTS e-mail regularly for COVID-19 updates and information. More details regarding spring semester protocols will be shared over the break.  

We remain grateful to you for doing your part to help keep our community as healthy as possible and urge you to continue to follow health measures wherever you spend the break.  We hope you enjoy yourself and have the opportunity to recharge over the break and that 2022 is filled with good health and blessings for you and your loved ones.  

With warm wishes,

Sara Horowitz 
Dean of Student Life  

DECEMBER 23, 2021

CLASSES WILL BE ONLINE AT START OF SPRING SEMESTER

Dear Students,

Mazal tov on reaching the end of yet another “semester unlike any other.” Your community-mindedness, patience, and determination helped us make it through the semester (until the very end!) with relatively little disruption to learning.

As many of you have heard, Columbia and Barnard have made the decision to welcome students back to campus as scheduled while holding the first two weeks of classes online. We are likewise trying to balance a return to routine with the health concerns that this latest wave of COVID has created. It is with this in mind that we are following their lead. We plan to welcome you back to campus as scheduled (the List College residence hall re-opens on Friday, January 14). Classes will begin ONLINE on January 18 and continue online through January 28. It is our hope that the COVID situation will allow classes to resume in person the following week. The dining hall is scheduled to be open as usual.

You will receive more information about campus events during the first two weeks of the semester at a later date. Also, a follow-up regarding updated COVID-19 measures, including testing protocols, will be shared shortly, so please be sure to check your email messages over the break.

Best wishes for a safe, healthy, and restful break.

Sincerely,

Dr. Jeffrey Kress
Dr. Jeffrey Kress
Provost
Dr. Bernard Heller Professor of Jewish Education

SEPTEMBER 9, 2021

COVID-19 PROTOCOL REMINDERS/UPDATE ON GATEWAY TESTING  

Fall Semester 2021

Important Reminders to Enter JTS’s Campus: 

Have you signed JTS’s COVID-19 Compact and submitted proof of vaccination?  

Important details are below on what is needed to enter campus!  

  • JTS Student Compact

Prior to entering campus for the fall semester, all students are required to read and sign our 2021-2022 Student Compact  HERE.  

  • COVID-19 Vaccinations

All JTS students, faculty, and staff must be fully vaccinated or receive an exemption from JTS in order to enter campus. The due date to submit vaccine documentation was August 2. Students who have not submitted vaccination proof or applied for an exemption will not be able to access campus for orientation, classes, or other campus activities.  

Details may be found here, in the June 24 message:
https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information

Update on COVID-19 Testing Requirements

Below is an update on our COVID-19 gateway testing protocols for fall semester 2021. All testing must be done through Columbia Health or Barnard.    

  • List College/Joint Program students who will be accessing JTS’s campus and the residence hall during the fall 2021 semester and are entering for the first time since January 2021 are required to complete a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health by September 9. No gateway testing is required for JTS students who have been present on campus during the Spring and Summer 2021 terms as they will have already completed this gateway test. 
  • List College/Double Degree students will be tested through Barnard’s testing program; more information can be found here: https://alert.barnard.edu/health-safety  
  • JTS Graduate Level students who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the fall 2021 semester and are entering for the first time since January 2021 are required to complete a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health. No gateway testing is required for JTS graduate students who have been present on campus during the Spring and Summer 2021 terms as they will have already completed this gateway test. We realize that graduate students may be returning to NYC after Rosh Hashanah. We therefore ask that graduate students complete their gateway test at Columbia Health by October 15.  

Students who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, and students who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and have received approved medical accommodations, must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health prior to accessing campus. Those who meet these criteria and live in the residence halls must quarantine while awaiting the result of their gateway test.  

Individuals who have had a positive SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic test in the prior 90 days do not need to undergo gateway testing or surveillance testing during the three months since their positive tests, unless they have symptoms of COVID-19. Read Columbia’s COVID-19 FAQs for more details. 

Surveillance Testing

  • Fully vaccinated students: All fully vaccinated JTS students who are accessing campus for any reason during the Fall 2021 Term are required to participate in the ongoing surveillance testing program at Columbia Health or Barnard. Each week, a random sample of students will be selected and notified by email and will be required to get tested within two weeks of notification. 
  • International students: Any JTS student arriving from an international destination and not considered fully vaccinated with a vaccine authorized by the FDA or WHO will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing at Columbia Health or Barnard Health until they are fully vaccinated (considered to be 2 weeks after final dose). 
  • Unvaccinated students: Any JTS student who will be accessing the JTS campus during the Fall 2021 Term and who has received a medical or religious exemption for COVID-19 vaccination will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard Health throughout the term. 
  • Sub-optimal vaccine response: Any JTS student who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the Fall 2021 Term, and who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and has received approved medical accommodations, will be required to undergo once-weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard throughout the term. 

How to Access Gateway and Surveillance Testing

Graduate Level Students  

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance, including your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.   

List College/Columbia  Joint Program Students 

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.   

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students  

Testing is scheduled through Barnard HERE.  Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.     

NOTE: If you have been informed by a medical provider that you are exempt from COVID-19 testing for a period of time due to a prior diagnosis, you need to submit documentation from Columbia Health or Barnard Health to studentlife@jtsa.edu.      

 
Other Important Health Protocol Reminders
 

Masks

All students will be required to follow the masking protocols in effect. Masks are currently required (even for students who are fully vaccinated) in indoor spaces, including classrooms, the Library, the synagogue, common areas, residence hall lounges, and kitchens. Exceptions to the masking requirement are when (1) students are outdoors, (2) alone in a room with a closed door, or (3) eating indoors and socially distanced from others. Masks should be on while praying before and after meals. Residents, please see below regarding protocols for living with roommates.   

When it is deemed safe enough to relax the current mask requirement for vaccinated individuals, students who are unvaccinated / immunocompromised will still be required to be masked at all times for their own health and the safety of others. Please remember that even if requirements are relaxed, there are individuals who may choose to continue to follow stricter measures and they should be able to do so without judgement from others. 

Physical Distancing

Vaccinated students are currently not required to maintain physical distance; however, students should maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others where possible. Unvaccinated students are required to maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others. 

Self-Monitor Symptoms Prior to Entering Campus and Stay Home If Unwell

Students will be required to monitor their symptoms each day before they enter JTS’s campus and should not come to campus if they experience symptoms. Students should contact Columbia Health or Barnard Health if they experience symptoms and inform their school dean if they test positive for COVID-19. Students who test positive will need to isolate in their home or a room in the residence hall until cleared to return by Columbia or Barnard Health or their medical provider. Students who live in the residence hall are not required to depart campus as long as they comply with JTS’s COVID-19 residence hall policies.  

Our faculty understands that in the event of symptoms or illness, students will need to miss class without penalty. Please make sure to contact your school dean or professors if you are unable to attend classes. If you are well enough to attend class “virtually,” please be in touch with the professor as soon as possible to discuss options. Do not come to class and risk exposing others. If you are too ill to attend class virtually, please connect with your professors as soon as you are able to discuss making up work.  

Dining

We strongly recommend that students dine outdoors as much as possible. Dining is currently permitted indoors in shared spaces on campus and in the residence halls; however, all should remain physically distanced from others while unmasked as they dine.  

Visitors

For fall term, only JTS students who have signed the Compact, are fully vaccinated (or received an exemption), and are getting tested through Columbia and Barnard’s surveillance program will be permitted to enter JTS’s campus or the residence halls. 

Families Helping Residents Move into the Residence Halls

Students are allowed to have up to two family members help them move into the residence hall. Family members will be required to show proof of vaccination in advance and wear a mask at all times. Consult your e-mails from Residence Life for further information or contact reslife@jtsa.edu.   

Residential Student Rooms

JTS residential students visiting other students in their room will need to wear a mask. JTS residents residing with a roommate should consider themselves a pod and don’t need to wear a mask in their room if only their roommate is present. 

Travel

Students may travel to see family if they do so safely. Please wear a mask while traveling. Upon return, students should monitor their symptoms and not re-enter campus if they feel unwell or have any symptoms. Additional COVID-19 testing may be required following holiday breaks. 

We are blessed to be part of a community of caring students who take responsibility for themselves and each other. We understand the uncertainty of this shifting environment is unsettling, and we hope that as the situation improves, we will be able to ease our guidelines. Nonetheless, it is critical that we all continue to work together to protect ourselves and others, especially those who are more at risk. 

As always, we encourage all students to utilize the support resources available at JTS, including their deans, Student Life and Residence Life staff, and our Counseling Center. 

Please continue to check your JTS e-mail regularly for updates as well as  https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information.  

We will continue to share health and safety information as well as meaningful ways we can safely be together in community. 

Wishing all JTS students a healthy, safe, rewarding, successful, and sweet new year.

AUGUST 19, 2021

COVID-19 PROTOCOLS—FALL SEMESTER OPENING 2021

In just a short time, we can finally come back together as a campus community, welcoming students to orientation, in-person classes, the residence halls, prayer services, and campus life. While the moment we have all yearned for is finally here, and vaccines have made it possible to be together, we must nonetheless remain mindful that COVID-19 continues to spread and pose serious health risks to many.  Please do your part by reading through and following these important health protocols, which are designed to help keep our campus community, loved ones, and neighbors as safe as possible.

The rabbinic tradition understood a verse in Deuteronomy to be the source of a positive mitzvah to guard our health. And it goes without saying that we are responsible for guarding the health of others, as well. Therefore, as we monitor COVID-19 in NYC, we may need to implement stricter protocols. If health conditions improve, we hope to be able to relax some of our measures in the future.

JTS Student Compact:

Prior to entering campus for orientation and/or fall semester classes, all students are required to read and sign our 2021-2022 Student Compact HERE.

COVID-19 Vaccinations:

All JTS students, faculty and staff must be fully vaccinated or receive an exemption from JTS in order to enter campus. The due date to submit vaccine documentation was August 2. Students who have not submitted vaccination proof or applied for an exemption must do so no later than August 22nd or they will not be able to access campus for orientation, classes, or other campus activities. Details may be found here, in the June 24 message:  https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information.

Masks:

All students will be required to follow the masking protocols in effect. Masks are currently required (even for students who are fully vaccinated) in indoor spaces, including classrooms, the Library, common areas, residence hall lounges, and kitchens. Exceptions to the masking requirement are when (1) students are outdoors, (2)  alone in a room with a closed door, or (3) eating indoors and socially distanced from others.

When it is deemed safe enough to relax the current mask requirement for vaccinated individuals, students who are unvaccinated / immunocompromised will still be required to be masked at all times for their own health and the safety of others. Please remember that even if requirements are relaxed, there are individuals who may choose to continue to follow stricter measures and they should be able to do so without judgement from others.

Physical Distancing:

Vaccinated students are currently not required to maintain physical distance; however, students should maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others where possible. Unvaccinated students are required to maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others.

Self-Monitor Symptoms Prior to Entering Campus and Stay Home If Unwell:

Students will be required to monitor their symptoms each day before they enter JTS’s campus and should not come to campus if they experience symptoms. In addition, students should not enter campus if they have been exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19. Students should contact Columbia Health or Barnard Health if they experience symptoms and inform their school dean if they test positive for COVID-19. Students who live in the residence hall are not required to depart campus if they experience symptoms as long as they comply with JTS’s COVID-19 residence hall policies.

Our faculty understands that in the event of symptoms, illness, or exposure to someone with COVID-19, students will need to miss class without penalty. Please make sure to contact your school dean or professors if you are unable to attend classes. If you are well enough to attend class “virtually,” please be in touch with the professor as soon as possible to discuss options. Do not come to class and risk exposing others. If you are too ill to attend class virtually, please connect with your professors as soon as you are able to discuss making up work.

Gateway Testing:

  • All students living in the residence halls are required to get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health within 24 hours (or next business day) after they move onto campus. If they are fully vaccinated, students will not need to quarantine while waiting for their gateway test results. 
  • Students living off-campus who are fully vaccinated must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test at Columbia Health by September 13. Campus access will be allowed while awaiting results of the gateway test.
  • Students who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, and students who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and have received approved medical accommodations, must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health prior to accessing campus. Those who meet these criteria and live in the residence halls must quarantine while awaiting the result of their gateway test.
  • Barnard/Double Degree students will be tested through Barnard’s testing program; more information can be found online here:https://alert.barnard.edu/health-safety

Surveillance Testing:

  • Fully vaccinated students: All fully vaccinated JTS students who are accessing campus for any reason during the Fall 2021 Term are required to participate in the ongoing surveillance testing program at Columbia Health or Barnard. Each week, a random sample of students will be selected and notified by email and will be required to get tested within two weeks of notification.
  • International students: Any JTS student arriving from an international destination and not considered fully vaccinated with a vaccine authorized by the FDA or WHO will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing at Columbia Health or Barnard Health until they are fully vaccinated (considered to be 2 weeks after final dose).
  • Unvaccinated students: Any JTS student who will be accessing the JTS campus during the Fall 2021 Term and who has received a medical or religious exemption for COVID-19 vaccination will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-10 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard Health throughout the term.
  • Sub-optimal vaccine response: Any JTS student who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the Fall 2021 Term, and who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and has received approved medical accommodations, will be required to undergo once-weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard throughout the term.

How to Access Gateway and Surveillance Testing:

Graduate Level Students 

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance, including your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.  

List College/Columbia Joint Program Students

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students 

Testing is scheduled through Barnard HERE. Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.   

NOTE: If you have been informed by a medical provider that you are exempt from COVID-19 testing for a period of time due to a prior diagnosis, you need to submit documentation from Columbia Health or Barnard Health to studentlife@jtsa.edu.     

Dining:

We strongly recommend that students dine outdoors as much as possible. Dining is currently permitted indoors in shared spaces on campus and in the residence halls; however, all should remain physically distanced from others while unmasked as they dine.

Visitors:

For fall term, only JTS students who have signed the Compact, are fully vaccinated (or received an exemption) and are getting tested through Columbia and Barnard’s surveillance program will be permitted to enter JTS’s campus or the residence halls.

Families Helping Residents Move into the Residence Halls:

Students are allowed to have up to two family members help them move into the residence hall. Family members will be required to show proof of vaccination and wear a mask at all times.

Residential Student Rooms:

JTS residential students visiting other students in their room will need to wear a mask. JTS residents residing with a roommate should consider themselves a pod and don’t need to wear a mask in their room if only their roommate is present.

Travel:

Students may travel to see family if they do so safely and wear a mask. Upon return, they should monitor their symptoms and not re-enter campus if they feel unwell, have any symptoms and/or have been exposed to someone with COVID-19. Additional COVID-19 testing may be required following holiday breaks.

We are blessed to be part of a community of caring students who take responsibility for themselves and each other. We understand the uncertainty of this shifting environment is unsettling, and we hope that as the situation improves, we will be able to ease our guidelines. Nonetheless, it is critical that we all continue to work together to protect ourselves and others, especially those who are more at risk.

As always, we encourage all students to utilize the support resources available at JTS, including their deans, Student Life and Residence Life staff, and our Counseling Center.

Finally, please continue to visit this page for updates and check your JTS e-mail regularly. We will continue to share health and safety information as well as meaningful ways we can safely be together in community.

Wishing all JTS students a healthy, safe, rewarding, successful, and sweet new year.

JUNE 24, 2021

UPDATE ON COVID-19 VACCINATION REQUIREMENT

Important Information for JTS Students: COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement 

We are eagerly preparing for students to arrive on campus as we resume in-person classes and activities in the fall 2021 semester. It is with great relief that we have seen COVID-19 cases in New York City and around the U.S. continue to decline, and restrictions are being lifted, thanks to COVID-19 vaccines and other health protocols. This will allow us to all be together again as a JTS community in just a few months.   

As shared in our updates in April and May, a COVID-19 vaccination will be mandatory for all new and returning JTS students who will be living on or utilizing our campus. In addition, later this summer we will issue a Fall Semester 2021 COVID-19 Compact for all students to commit to follow. These measures will help ensure the safe return to the campus life that we all yearn to experience again.  

Below is important information regarding compliance, vaccination information, uploading your proof of vaccination, and applying for an exemption. Any student who does not complete the vaccination requirement or does not receive a medical or religious exemption to the COVID-19 vaccine will not be permitted to access JTS’s campus during the fall semester nor engage in any in-person JTS activities.  

COVID-19 Vaccination Process and Submitting Documentation to JTS 

All students are expected to complete the vaccine process at least 14 days before first accessing the JTS campus and residence halls to ensure they are considered fully vaccinated at the time of first access. International students: please see the next section for additional guidance. Students must have their vaccine documentation submitted to JTS no later than August 2. 

Completion of the vaccine process is defined as: 

  • At least 14 days after the second dose of a two-dose vaccine 
  • At least 14 days after receiving a single dose vaccine (currently only the Janssen/Johnson & Johnson vaccine) 

Students must upload a photo of their vaccine record in order to complete the vaccine requirement. To verify that you have been vaccinated, please upload a photo of your CDC card, WHO booklet, or a physician letter containing details of your vaccinations HERE by August 2, 2021. To complete the form, you will need to log into your JTSA email account in order to upload a picture of your proof of vaccination. All documents must include: 

  • Student Name 
  • Date of Birth 
  • Name of vaccine received 
  • Date of vaccination(s) 
  • Provider name, signature, or stamp 

Please note that digital vaccine passports do not fulfill the requirement. All documentation will be reviewed by the Registrar’s Office. Students will be contacted if further information is needed.  

International Students 

We strongly recommend that international students be vaccinated as soon as possible and receive the full dose series for optimal protection. JTS accepts all vaccines authorized/approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the World Health Organization (WHO). Vaccines must have been administered on or after December 1, 2020.  

We understand that some international students may not be able to access vaccines or complete a vaccine series before coming to New York this fall. Columbia Health will have vaccines available to administer during the first week you are on campus. If you arrive in the United States earlier, please get your vaccine at the site closest to you. Until fully vaccinated (as defined above) students will be required to comply with additional COVID-19 testing requirements and other preventive measures in place at that time. International students who are unable to be fully vaccinated prior to your arrival to NYC should email registrar@jtsa.edu by August 2, 2021 so we can help you get vaccinated upon your arrival.  

Exemptions 

In order to be considered for a medical or religious exemption, students must submit an exemption form to the Registrar’s Office no later than August 2, 2021. Students seeking an exemption should contact registrar@jtsa.edu well in advance to receive a copy of the form and obtain the necessary documentation prior to the August 2 deadline. All forms must be completed in full including submitting the required documentation. Students who have received an exemption from JTS will be required to comply with additional COVID-19 testing and other preventive health protocols (including wearing masks and physical distancing) for their own protection and for the safety of others.  

Submitting Documentation to Columbia or Barnard  

In addition to submitting vaccine proof to JTS, all JTS students need to submit their documentation or an exemption application directly to Columbia or Barnard as follows: 

JTS graduate level students and List College Joint Program students will need to upload their vaccine documentation to Columbia Health by August 2, 2021 in order to access Columbia’s campus, including the Columbia Health service. Students seeking a medical or religious exemption will need to apply through Columbia Health in addition to submitting an exemption application to JTS. Please upload a picture/copy of your CDC card, WHO booklet, or a physician letter containing details of your vaccinations via the Columbia Health Patient PortalInstructions are available to help you submit your information. The upload process applies to both those who have been vaccinated and those who may be requesting a religious or medical exemption
 
List College Double Degree students will also need to submit their COVID-19 vaccination documentation to the Barnard Health Service or apply for a medical or religious exemption. Please follow instructions sent by Barnard over the summer and visit https://alert.barnard.edu/covid-19-vaccine for further information.   

Obtaining a COVID-19 Vaccine 

As a reminder, below are resources on obtaining a COVID-19 vaccine:  

  • Columbia Health has a good vaccine supply at Columbia-operated sites, with same day or next-day availability in many cases. There are several ways to make an appointment at Columbia-operated locations; all options are online as noted below. 
  • Columbia’s Morningside campus appointments at Lerner Hall can be made through Columbia Health. Booking an appointment can be done via the scheduling section of the Columbia Health Patient Portal.  Walk-in appointments are also available. Please visit HERE for further information.  
  • Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) and appointments at other Columbia locations can be made via vaccinetogetherny.org or through your Connect account (if you use Columbia Doctors providers). The locations include: 650 W. 168th Street, 51 W. 51st Street, and 2702 Broadway. 

Students are also encouraged to check the covid19.columbia.edu website for updates. 

Please stay tuned for more information regarding our Fall Semester COVID-19 Student Compact and other important updates.  

Again, we want to share our gratitude for your patience and for continuing to do your part to protect yourselves and the lives of others during this pandemic. We have all been through a lot—as individuals and as a community separated through physical distance. We remain here to support all students and look forward to finally welcoming you to our new 3080 Broadway campus very soon.  

Wishing you and your family a healthy, safe, and wonderful summer. 

SEPTEMBER 9, 2021

COVID-19 PROTOCOL REMINDERS/UPDATE ON GATEWAY TESTING

Fall Semester 2021

Important Reminders to Enter JTS’s Campus: 

Have you signed JTS’s COVID-19 Compact and submitted proof of vaccination?

Important details are below on what is needed to enter campus!

  • JTS Student Compact:

Prior to entering campus for the fall semester, all students are required to read and sign our 2021-2022 Student Compact  HERE.

  • COVID-19 Vaccinations:

All JTS students, faculty, and staff must be fully vaccinated or receive an exemption from JTS in order to enter campus. The due date to submit vaccine documentation was August 2. Students who have not submitted vaccination proof or applied for an exemption will not be able to access campus for orientation, classes, or other campus activities.

Details may be found here, in the June 24 message:
https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information.

Update on COVID-19 Testing Requirements:

Below is an update on our COVID-19 gateway testing protocols for fall semester 2021. All testing must be done through Columbia Health or Barnard.

  • List College/Joint Program students who will be accessing JTS’s campus and the residence hall during the fall 2021 semester and are entering for the first time since January 2021 are required to complete a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health by September 9. No gateway testing is required for JTS students who have been present on campus during the Spring and Summer 2021 terms as they will have already completed this gateway test.
  • JTS Graduate Level students who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the fall 2021 semester and are entering for the first time since January 2021 are required to complete a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health. No gateway testing is required for JTS graduate students who have been present on campus during the Spring and Summer 2021 terms as they will have already completed this gateway test. We realize that graduate students may be returning to NYC after Rosh Hashanah. We therefore ask that graduate students complete their gateway test at Columbia Health by October 15.

Students who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, and students who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and have received approved medical accommodations, must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health prior to accessing campus. Those who meet these criteria and live in the residence halls must quarantine while awaiting the result of their gateway test.

Individuals who have had a positive SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic test in the prior 90 days do not need to undergo gateway testing or surveillance testing during the three months since their positive tests, unless they have symptoms of COVID-19. Read Columbia’s COVID-19 FAQs for more details.

Surveillance Testing:

  • Fully vaccinated students: All fully vaccinated JTS students who are accessing campus for any reason during the Fall 2021 Term are required to participate in the ongoing surveillance testing program at Columbia Health or Barnard. Each week, a random sample of students will be selected and notified by email and will be required to get tested within two weeks of notification.
  • International students: Any JTS student arriving from an international destination and not considered fully vaccinated with a vaccine authorized by the FDA or WHO will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing at Columbia Health or Barnard Health until they are fully vaccinated (considered to be 2 weeks after final dose).
  • Unvaccinated students: Any JTS student who will be accessing the JTS campus during the Fall 2021 Term and who has received a medical or religious exemption for COVID-19 vaccination will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard Health throughout the term.
  • Sub-optimal vaccine response: Any JTS student who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the Fall 2021 Term, and who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and has received approved medical accommodations, will be required to undergo once-weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard throughout the term.

How to Access Gateway and Surveillance Testing:

Graduate Level Students  

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance, including your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.

List College/Columbia  Joint Program Students 

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students  

Testing is scheduled through Barnard HERE.  Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.

NOTE: If you have been informed by a medical provider that you are exempt from COVID-19 testing for a period of time due to a prior diagnosis, you need to submit documentation from Columbia Health or Barnard Health to studentlife@jtsa.edu.      

Other Important Health Protocol Reminders:

Masks:

All students will be required to follow the masking protocols in effect. Masks are currently required (even for students who are fully vaccinated) in indoor spaces, including classrooms, the Library, the synagogue, common areas, residence hall lounges, and kitchens. Exceptions to the masking requirement are when (1) students are outdoors, (2) alone in a room with a closed door, or (3) eating indoors and socially distanced from others. Masks should be on while praying before and after meals. Residents, please see below regarding protocols for living with roommates.

When it is deemed safe enough to relax the current mask requirement for vaccinated individuals, students who are unvaccinated / immunocompromised will still be required to be masked at all times for their own health and the safety of others. Please remember that even if requirements are relaxed, there are individuals who may choose to continue to follow stricter measures and they should be able to do so without judgement from others.

Physical Distancing:

Vaccinated students are currently not required to maintain physical distance; however, students should maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others where possible. Unvaccinated students are required to maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others.

Self-Monitor Symptoms Prior to Entering Campus and Stay Home If Unwell:

Students will be required to monitor their symptoms each day before they enter JTS’s campus and should not come to campus if they experience symptoms. Students should contact Columbia Health or Barnard Health if they experience symptoms and inform their school dean if they test positive for COVID-19. Students who test positive will need to isolate in their home or a room in the residence hall until cleared to return by Columbia or Barnard Health or their medical provider. Students who live in the residence hall are not required to depart campus as long as they comply with JTS’s COVID-19 residence hall policies.

Our faculty understands that in the event of symptoms or illness, students will need to miss class without penalty. Please make sure to contact your school dean or professors if you are unable to attend classes. If you are well enough to attend class “virtually,” please be in touch with the professor as soon as possible to discuss options. Do not come to class and risk exposing others. If you are too ill to attend class virtually, please connect with your professors as soon as you are able to discuss making up work.

Dining:

We strongly recommend that students dine outdoors as much as possible. Dining is currently permitted indoors in shared spaces on campus and in the residence halls; however, all should remain physically distanced from others while unmasked as they dine.

Visitors:

For fall term, only JTS students who have signed the Compact, are fully vaccinated (or received an exemption), and are getting tested through Columbia and Barnard’s surveillance program will be permitted to enter JTS’s campus or the residence halls.

Families Helping Residents Move into the Residence Halls:

Students are allowed to have up to two family members help them move into the residence hall. Family members will be required to show proof of vaccination in advance and wear a mask at all times. Consult your e-mails from Residence Life for further information or contact reslife@jtsa.edu.   

Residential Student Rooms:

JTS residential students visiting other students in their room will need to wear a mask. JTS residents residing with a roommate should consider themselves a pod and don’t need to wear a mask in their room if only their roommate is present.

Travel:

Students may travel to see family if they do so safely. Please wear a mask while traveling. Upon return, students should monitor their symptoms and not re-enter campus if they feel unwell or have any symptoms. Additional COVID-19 testing may be required following holiday breaks.

We are blessed to be part of a community of caring students who take responsibility for themselves and each other. We understand the uncertainty of this shifting environment is unsettling, and we hope that as the situation improves, we will be able to ease our guidelines. Nonetheless, it is critical that we all continue to work together to protect ourselves and others, especially those who are more at risk.

As always, we encourage all students to utilize the support resources available at JTS, including their deans, Student Life and Residence Life staff, and our Counseling Center.

Please continue to check your JTS e-mail regularly for updates as well as  https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information.

We will continue to share health and safety information as well as meaningful ways we can safely be together in community.

Wishing all JTS students a healthy, safe, rewarding, successful, and sweet new year.

AUGUST 19, 2021

COVID-19 PROTOCOLS—FALL SEMESTER OPENING 2021

In just a short time, we can finally come back together as a campus community, welcoming students to orientation, in-person classes, the residence halls, prayer services, and campus life. While the moment we have all yearned for is finally here, and vaccines have made it possible to be together, we must nonetheless remain mindful that COVID-19 continues to spread and pose serious health risks to many.  Please do your part by reading through and following these important health protocols, which are designed to help keep our campus community, loved ones, and neighbors as safe as possible.

The rabbinic tradition understood a verse in Deuteronomy to be the source of a positive mitzvah to guard our health. And it goes without saying that we are responsible for guarding the health of others, as well. Therefore, as we monitor COVID-19 in NYC, we may need to implement stricter protocols. If health conditions improve, we hope to be able to relax some of our measures in the future.

JTS Student Compact:

Prior to entering campus for orientation and/or fall semester classes, all students are required to read and sign our 2021-2022 Student Compact HERE.

COVID-19 Vaccinations:

All JTS students, faculty and staff must be fully vaccinated or receive an exemption from JTS in order to enter campus. The due date to submit vaccine documentation was August 2. Students who have not submitted vaccination proof or applied for an exemption must do so no later than August 22nd or they will not be able to access campus for orientation, classes, or other campus activities. Details may be found here, in the June 24 message:  https://www.jtsa.edu/coronavirus-student-information.

Masks:

All students will be required to follow the masking protocols in effect. Masks are currently required (even for students who are fully vaccinated) in indoor spaces, including classrooms, the Library, common areas, residence hall lounges, and kitchens. Exceptions to the masking requirement are when (1) students are outdoors, (2)  alone in a room with a closed door, or (3) eating indoors and socially distanced from others.

When it is deemed safe enough to relax the current mask requirement for vaccinated individuals, students who are unvaccinated / immunocompromised will still be required to be masked at all times for their own health and the safety of others. Please remember that even if requirements are relaxed, there are individuals who may choose to continue to follow stricter measures and they should be able to do so without judgement from others.

Physical Distancing:

Vaccinated students are currently not required to maintain physical distance; however, students should maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others where possible. Unvaccinated students are required to maintain at least 6 feet of distance from others.

Self-Monitor Symptoms Prior to Entering Campus and Stay Home If Unwell:

Students will be required to monitor their symptoms each day before they enter JTS’s campus and should not come to campus if they experience symptoms. In addition, students should not enter campus if they have been exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19. Students should contact Columbia Health or Barnard Health if they experience symptoms and inform their school dean if they test positive for COVID-19. Students who live in the residence hall are not required to depart campus if they experience symptoms as long as they comply with JTS’s COVID-19 residence hall policies.

Our faculty understands that in the event of symptoms, illness, or exposure to someone with COVID-19, students will need to miss class without penalty. Please make sure to contact your school dean or professors if you are unable to attend classes. If you are well enough to attend class “virtually,” please be in touch with the professor as soon as possible to discuss options. Do not come to class and risk exposing others. If you are too ill to attend class virtually, please connect with your professors as soon as you are able to discuss making up work.

Gateway Testing:

  • All students living in the residence halls are required to get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health within 24 hours (or next business day) after they move onto campus. If they are fully vaccinated, students will not need to quarantine while waiting for their gateway test results.
  • Students living off-campus who are fully vaccinated must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test at Columbia Health by September 13. Campus access will be allowed while awaiting results of the gateway test.
  • Students who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, and students who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and have received approved medical accommodations, must get a COVID-19 PCR gateway test from Columbia Health prior to accessing campus. Those who meet these criteria and live in the residence halls must quarantine while awaiting the result of their gateway test.
  • Barnard/Double Degree students will be tested through Barnard’s testing program; more information can be found online here: https://alert.barnard.edu/health-safety

Surveillance Testing:

  • Fully vaccinated students: All fully vaccinated JTS students who are accessing campus for any reason during the Fall 2021 Term are required to participate in the ongoing surveillance testing program at Columbia Health or Barnard. Each week, a random sample of students will be selected and notified by email and will be required to get tested within two weeks of notification.
  • International students: Any JTS student arriving from an international destination and not considered fully vaccinated with a vaccine authorized by the FDA or WHO will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing at Columbia Health or Barnard Health until they are fully vaccinated (considered to be 2 weeks after final dose).
  • Unvaccinated students: Any JTS student who will be accessing the JTS campus during the Fall 2021 Term and who has received a medical or religious exemption for COVID-19 vaccination will be required to undergo once weekly COVID-10 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard Health throughout the term.
  • Sub-optimal vaccine response: Any JTS student who will be accessing JTS’s campus during the Fall 2021 Term, and who may have a sub-optimal vaccine response due to underlying medical conditions and has received approved medical accommodations, will be required to undergo once-weekly COVID-19 diagnostic PCR testing from Columbia Health or Barnard throughout the term.

How to Access Gateway and Surveillance Testing:

Graduate Level Students 

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance, including your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.

List College/Columbia Joint Program Students

Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students

Testing is scheduled through Barnard HERE.  Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.

NOTE: If you have been informed by a medical provider that you are exempt from COVID-19 testing for a period of time due to a prior diagnosis, you need to submit documentation from Columbia Health or Barnard Health to studentlife@jtsa.edu.    

Dining:

We strongly recommend that students dine outdoors as much as possible. Dining is currently permitted indoors in shared spaces on campus and in the residence halls; however, all should remain physically distanced from others while unmasked as they dine.

Visitors:

For fall term, only JTS students who have signed the Compact, are fully vaccinated (or received an exemption) and are getting tested through Columbia and Barnard’s surveillance program will be permitted to enter JTS’s campus or the residence halls.

Families Helping Residents Move into the Residence Halls:

Students are allowed to have up to two family members help them move into the residence hall. Family members will be required to show proof of vaccination and wear a mask at all times.

Residential Student Rooms:

JTS residential students visiting other students in their room will need to wear a mask. JTS residents residing with a roommate should consider themselves a pod and don’t need to wear a mask in their room if only their roommate is present.

Travel:

Students may travel to see family if they do so safely and wear a mask. Upon return, they should monitor their symptoms and not re-enter campus if they feel unwell, have any symptoms and/or have been exposed to someone with COVID-19. Additional COVID-19 testing may be required following holiday breaks.

We are blessed to be part of a community of caring students who take responsibility for themselves and each other. We understand the uncertainty of this shifting environment is unsettling, and we hope that as the situation improves, we will be able to ease our guidelines. Nonetheless, it is critical that we all continue to work together to protect ourselves and others, especially those who are more at risk.

As always, we encourage all students to utilize the support resources available at JTS, including their deans, Student Life and Residence Life staff, and our Counseling Center.

Finally, please continue to visit this page for updates and check your JTS e-mail regularly. We will continue to share health and safety information as well as meaningful ways we can safely be together in community.

Wishing all JTS students a healthy, safe, rewarding, successful, and sweet new year.

JUNE 24, 2021

UPDATE ON COVID-19 VACCINATION REQUIREMENT

Important Information for JTS Students: COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement 

We are eagerly preparing for students to arrive on campus as we resume in-person classes and activities in the fall 2021 semester. It is with great relief that we have seen COVID-19 cases in New York City and around the U.S. continue to decline, and restrictions are being lifted, thanks to COVID-19 vaccines and other health protocols. This will allow us to all be together again as a JTS community in just a few months.   

As shared in our updates in April and May, a COVID-19 vaccination will be mandatory for all new and returning JTS students who will be living on or utilizing our campus. In addition, later this summer we will issue a Fall Semester 2021 COVID-19 Compact for all students to commit to follow. These measures will help ensure the safe return to the campus life that we all yearn to experience again.  

Below is important information regarding compliance, vaccination information, uploading your proof of vaccination, and applying for an exemption. Any student who does not complete the vaccination requirement or does not receive a medical or religious exemption to the COVID-19 vaccine will not be permitted to access JTS’s campus during the fall semester nor engage in any in-person JTS activities.  

COVID-19 Vaccination Process and Submitting Documentation to JTS 

All students are expected to complete the vaccine process at least 14 days before first accessing the JTS campus and residence halls to ensure they are considered fully vaccinated at the time of first access. International students: please see the next section for additional guidance. Students must have their vaccine documentation submitted to JTS no later than August 2. 

Completion of the vaccine process is defined as: 

  • At least 14 days after the second dose of a two-dose vaccine 
  • At least 14 days after receiving a single dose vaccine (currently only the Janssen/Johnson & Johnson vaccine) 

Students must upload a photo of their vaccine record in order to complete the vaccine requirement. To verify that you have been vaccinated, please upload a photo of your CDC card, WHO booklet, or a physician letter containing details of your vaccinations HERE by August 2, 2021To complete the form, you will need to log into your JTSA email account in order to upload a picture of your proof of vaccination. All documents must include: 

  • Student Name 
  • Date of Birth 
  • Name of vaccine received 
  • Date of vaccination(s) 
  • Provider name, signature, or stamp 

Please note that digital vaccine passports do not fulfill the requirement. All documentation will be reviewed by the Registrar’s Office. Students will be contacted if further information is needed.  

International Students 

We strongly recommend that international students be vaccinated as soon as possible and receive the full dose series for optimal protection. JTS accepts all vaccines authorized/approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the World Health Organization (WHO). Vaccines must have been administered on or after December 1, 2020.  

We understand that some international students may not be able to access vaccines or complete a vaccine series before coming to New York this fall. Columbia Health will have vaccines available to administer during the first week you are on campus. If you arrive in the United States earlier, please get your vaccine at the site closest to you. Until fully vaccinated (as defined above) students will be required to comply with additional COVID-19 testing requirements and other preventive measures in place at that time. International students who are unable to be fully vaccinated prior to your arrival to NYC should email registrar@jtsa.edu by August 2, 2021 so we can help you get vaccinated upon your arrival.  

Exemptions 

In order to be considered for a medical or religious exemption, students must submit an exemption form to the Registrar’s Office no later than August 2, 2021. Students seeking an exemption should contact registrar@jtsa.edu well in advance to receive a copy of the form and obtain the necessary documentation prior to the August 2 deadline. All forms must be completed in full including submitting the required documentation. Students who have received an exemption from JTS will be required to comply with additional COVID-19 testing and other preventive health protocols (including wearing masks and physical distancing) for their own protection and for the safety of others.  

Submitting Documentation to Columbia or Barnard  

In addition to submitting vaccine proof to JTS, all JTS students need to submit their documentation or an exemption application directly to Columbia or Barnard as follows: 

JTS graduate level students and List College Joint Program students will need to upload their vaccine documentation to Columbia Health by August 2, 2021 in order to access Columbia’s campus, including the Columbia Health service. Students seeking a medical or religious exemption will need to apply through Columbia Health in addition to submitting an exemption application to JTS. Please upload a picture/copy of your CDC card, WHO booklet, or a physician letter containing details of your vaccinations via the Columbia Health Patient PortalInstructions are available to help you submit your information. The upload process applies to both those who have been vaccinated and those who may be requesting a religious or medical exemption.

List College Double Degree students will also need to submit their COVID-19 vaccination documentation to the Barnard Health Service or apply for a medical or religious exemption. Please follow instructions sent by Barnard over the summer and visit https://alert.barnard.edu/covid-19-vaccine for further information.  

Obtaining a COVID-19 Vaccine 

As a reminder, below are resources on obtaining a COVID-19 vaccine:  

  • Columbia Health has a good vaccine supply at Columbia-operated sites, with same day or next-day availability in many cases. There are several ways to make an appointment at Columbia-operated locations; all options are online as noted below. 
  • Columbia’s Morningside campus appointments at Lerner Hall can be made through Columbia Health. Booking an appointment can be done via the scheduling section of the Columbia Health Patient Portal.  Walk-in appointments are also available. Please visit HERE for further information.  
  • Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) and appointments at other Columbia locations can be made via vaccinetogetherny.org or through your Connect account (if you use Columbia Doctors providers). The locations include: 650 W. 168th Street, 51 W. 51st Street, and 2702 Broadway. 

Students are also encouraged to check the covid19.columbia.edu website for updates. 

Please stay tuned for more information regarding our Fall Semester COVID-19 Student Compact and other important updates.  

Again, we want to share our gratitude for your patience and for continuing to do your part to protect yourselves and the lives of others during this pandemic. We have all been through a lot—as individuals and as a community separated through physical distance. We remain here to support all students and look forward to finally welcoming you to our new 3080 Broadway campus very soon.  

Wishing you and your family a healthy, safe, and wonderful summer. 

May 25, 2021

Update from Sara Horowitz

COVID-19 Protocols for Students Accessing the JTS Campus—Summer 2021 

We remain grateful to the campus community for helping protect the health of our colleagues, friends, and neighbors by adhering to JTS’s COVID-19 protocols. As we transition into summer, we want to remind all students of the requirements for entering campus to utilize indoor and outdoor study spaces including visiting our beautiful new Library.

We are relieved that vaccines are now available and encourage all students to get vaccinated as soon as possible. Please review the message sent to students on April 30, 2021 which details our plans for mandating COVID-19 vaccines for the fall 2021 semester and includes information on how to get vaccinated.

It is important to remember that we all must continue to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

In an effort to continue to protect all students and employees on campus, the following health measures, including testing protocols, are in place throughout the summer. All individuals must continue to wear masks at all times in indoor settings at JTS and observe current 6-foot distancing protocols, since the vaccination status is unknown for everyone on campus. Vaccinated individuals may remove masks only in outdoor settings on JTS’s campus. Further information regarding the fall semester will be shared in the coming months.

Information for Students Planning to Enter JTS Over the Summer 

JTS students are welcome to come to campus at 3080 Broadway. Large outdoor and indoor study spaces will be available during JTS business hours (Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.). Spaces include the atrium, the courtyard and outdoor patios, and the Beit Midrash. (Note: The Beit Midrash will be open for study until 8 p.m. Monday-Thursday and until 4 p.m. on Friday.) Students may also access the JTS Library by appointment.

JTS ID is required to enter campus and our pre-entry protocols must be followed. Students who are not in compliance will be unable to access campus until they fulfill all pre-entry requirements. In order to have JTS IDs reactivated, students should plan ahead for their visit to campus and contact studentlife@jtsa.edu after they have completed the requirements.  

Student Responsibilities   

All JTS students are required to do the following prior to entering JTS’s campus over the summer:

  • Sign JTS’s COVID-19 Spring Semester Community Compact.
  • Conduct daily self-screening.
  • Participate in Columbia or Barnard’s COVID-19 testing program including completing a (new) gateway test on or after May 30 (details below) and ongoing surveillance testing.

The signing of the JTS compact and gateway testing compliance will be linked to your JTS ID card. Only students who fulfill each of these requirements will have their JTS ID activated and be able to access campus.

Details for each responsibility are outlined below:

COVID-19 Student Community Compact  

All JTS students who have not already signed our spring semester compact are required to sign the COVID-19 Community Compact prior to entering campus. The compact outlines your responsibilities as a student in order to be present in-person on campus over the summer. Among other responsibilities, these include wearing face coverings, following physical distancing requirements, washing hands frequently, COVID-19 testing, and staying home when unwell.

Daily Symptom Self-Screening to Enter Campus  

Students will be required to go through a brief screening and symptom self-check each time they enter JTS’s campus. Students who plan to enter campus three or more times during the summer semester should email studentlife@jtsa.edu to reserve an app and smart thermometer.

COVID-19 Testing

Regardless of whether a student has been vaccinated, the following testing protocols are required in order to enter the JTS campus.

Graduate Level Students  

All JTS graduate level students are required to receive a PCR COVID-19 test from Columbia Health (and obtain a negative result) within 7 days prior to entering JTS. Even if students have received a prior PCR COVID-19 gateway test since April 5, they will need to receive a new gateway test on or after May 30 and within 7 days before initial entry to campus in order to enter campus. Tests from outside providers will not be accepted.

Graduate level students will also participate in Columbia Health‘s random sampling surveillance testing program. It is still strongly recommended that JTS graduate students who are accessing campus undergo weekly COVID-19 diagnostic testing at Columbia Health throughout the summer. Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance, including your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.

List College Students  

List College/Columbia  JP students are required to continue to participate in surveillance COVID-19 testing once per week through Columbia Health. Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students  are required to follow Barnard’s testing protocols and must receive at least weekly surveillance testing (twice weekly if living in Barnard’s residence halls). Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.

NOTE: If you have been informed by a medical provider that you are exempt from COVID-19 testing for a period of time due to a prior diagnosis, you need to submit documentation from Columbia Health or Barnard Health to studentlife@jtsa.edu.    

Campus Health and Safety Protocols  

All members of the JTS community will be required to follow JTS’s Community Compact and our health and hygiene practices, which include washing hands frequently with soap and water (or using hand sanitizer when these are unavailable), avoiding touching one’s face with unwashed hands, and sneezing or coughing into one’s elbow. In addition, the following protocols will be required at all times of anyone on campus. Your JTS photo ID is required to enter JTS. 

  • Stay home and away from others if not feeling well or if you have been exposed to someone with COVID-19. If you test positive for COVID-19 or are informed you were exposed, notify your school dean.

  • Anyone entering the JTS campus will be required to sanitize their hands and have a self-screening temperature/symptom check upon entering.    

  • Keep at least 6 feet distance between yourself and other people at all times. 

  • Wear a face covering over your nose and mouth at all times while indoors. The only exceptions to required face coverings are when alone in a private room with a closed door.

  • Vaccinated individuals may remove masks only in outdoor settings on JTS’s campus.

  • Eating is only permitted in outdoor spaces while remaining at least six feet apart from others. In this case, you should sit side by side not directly across from someone else.

  • Follow signage and protocols on use of campus spaces including elevators and communal areas.

  • Follow workplace and shared-space hygiene. Wipe workplace surfaces used frequently, including desk surfaces, tables, keyboards, light switches, and shared equipment with disinfectant sprays or wipes that JTS will provide. JTS will also conduct frequent, specialized cleaning of high-touch surfaces throughout campus.

We continue to mandate and observe extensive health and safety protocols on campus. Remember, however, that the risk of COVID-19 cannot be eliminated from campus. Please take into consideration any individual circumstances or concerns when determining whether to participate in any in-person activities.

Our continued commitment to consistently embracing and following the JTS Student Compact is how we can best collectively promote a safe and healthy campus for everyone.

We wish all students a safe, healthy, restful, and meaningful summer! 

April 30, 2021

Vaccination Update from Sara Horowitz

Dear JTS Students,

As we conclude the spring semester, I want to take a moment to share my gratitude with all of you. Wherever you reside, you have cared for one another and the greater community and helped us all stay connected during this most challenging year. 

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, the health and safety of JTS students and employees and their loved ones has been our highest priority. The health protocols that we have all followed on and off-campus reflect the value of pikuah nefesh—safeguarding lives. 

We are excited about welcoming all JTS students back to campus for the fall 2021 semester. Based on guidance from the CDC, the New York Department of Health, and Columbia Health, we will continue to implement protocols that maintain the safety of everyone on campus while fostering the sense of community that is such an integral part of JTS. 

To that end, like many area colleges and universities, JTS has decided that at the beginning of the fall semester, the COVID-19 vaccination will be mandatory for all new and returning JTS students who will be living on or utilizing our campus. This decision was made to help protect the health of our JTS campus community as well as our neighbors in New York City. In accordance with New York State public health laws, students may apply for a medical or religious exemption. 

This vaccine requirement will be one important component of our health and safety protocols for the fall semester. Students will also be expected to continue to follow all other measures deemed necessary by health experts, and to sign a Fall Semester 2021 Student Compact. Specific details, including how and where to submit proof of vaccination, will be shared in the coming weeks. In the meantime, as we move toward the fall semester, we strongly encourage all students to get vaccinated as soon as possible. Below is information about finding vaccines in New York City and throughout the United States. Columbia Health will also be able to provide vaccinations to any returning students in the fall, who have not yet been vaccinated.

Vaccine Information:

  • United States Vaccine Finder helps you find clinics, pharmacies, and other locations that offer COVID-19 vaccines in the United States.
  • NYC Vaccine Finder:  Use website or call 1-877-VAX-4NYC.
  • Columbia Health has a good vaccine supply at Columbia-operated sites, with same day or next-day availability in many cases. There are several ways to make an appointment at Columbia-operated locations; all options are online as noted below. Appointments are released periodically, so check these online scheduling options often:
    • Columbia’s Morningside campus appointments at Lerner Hall can be made through Columbia Health. Booking an appointment can be done via the scheduling section of the Columbia Health Patient Portal. A limited day-of waiting list can be joined by emailing your name and phone number tovaccineinfo@columbia.edu. 
    • Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) and appointments at other Columbia locations can be made viavaccinetogetherny.org or through your Connect account (if you use Columbia Doctors providers). The locations include: 650 W. 168thStreet, 51 W. 51st Street, and 2702 Broadway.

Students are also encouraged to check the covid19.columbia.edu website for updates.

As we transition into being back together in-person, I know we will all want to heed the Jewish tradition’s strong insistence on the obligation to protect one’s health and the health of others in our community, to whom we are bound by ties of mutual trust. Please stay tuned for more information regarding our Fall Semester COVID-19 Student Compact and other important updates.

Nothing makes me smile more than anticipating the arrival of students to our JTS campus this coming fall semester! 

Wishing you and your family a healthy, safe, and wonderful summer.

L’Shalom,

Sara Horowitz 

Dean of Student Life

April 7, 2021

Fall Semester Plans Update from Chancellor Shuly Rubin Schwartz

Dear JTS Community,

As we enter the last weeks of the semester, I want to thank you—students, faculty, and staff—for all you’ve done, in the face of a historic global pandemic, to help us complete the academic year with great success.

Though most of us remain physically separate, we have maintained the connections that bind us. We have found new ways to study and work together, to socialize and celebrate, to bring JTS learning to new audiences, and to serve and care for our community and the communities around us. At the same time, we’ve missed the in-person conversations, the spontaneous exchange of ideas, the experience of being together that enhances our work and study in invisible yet tangible ways.

Thankfully, the arrival and distribution of life-saving vaccines has enabled the hope that we can plan realistically to return to campus. If all goes well, this means that we will open for in-person classes and residential life in the fall, while continuing to take all necessary precautions to maintain the safety of our community. After the past year, we all know that circumstances can change quickly and could yet force us to revise our best-laid plans. But right now, we are in the first stage of preparing for a full campus re-opening, as are our partners at Columbia and Barnard. 

The challenges of the past year, though not welcome, have taught us a great deal. At first our campus was closed to all but essential employees, while all other work and all classes went online. Gradually, we were able to open our doors safely on a limited basis to staff, faculty, and students who wanted to use our campus facilities. This spring, we welcomed back a small number of students to our residence hall. The Library re-opened. And we held a small number of class sessions outdoors. How thrilling it was to see colleagues face to face after so many months of solely virtual engagement. And how wonderful it was to hear the sounds of learning through my office window! Thanks to all of these experiences, I believe we are now well-prepared to oversee a larger re-opening of campus in the fall. I am also heartened to know that we can count on our staff and students to take seriously the health precautions needed to maintain a safe environment.

This is only the first of many communications you will receive about the fall semester. I know you already have numerous questions, and I ask you to please hold them for the moment. We are just beginning to develop our fall plan and to address the myriad issues that must be resolved as part of a safe re-opening. I assure you that we will be in touch just as soon as we know more.

Right now, my heart is full at the thought of seeing all of you in person and enabling everyone in the JTS community to join together on our beautifully renovated campus.

Thank you all again for your resilience, your hard work, and the caring support you have shown one another. You have allowed JTS to thrive during this extraordinarily challenging time.

Sincerely, 

Shuly Rubin Schwartz
Chancellor

January 6, 2021

Spring Semester Update from Sara Horowitz, Dean of Student Life

Entering Campus and Keeping our Community Healthy 

Dear Students, 

After a long fall semester, I hope you are taking time over the winter break to recharge and enjoy yourself while staying healthy and safe.   

During this challenging time, I am grateful for JTS students and for the light each of you brings to our vibrant community of learners. You have demonstrated your warmth and deep compassion since the start of this pandemic. My hope and prayer for each of you is that 2021 and this new semester are filled with renewal and meaningful ways to connect with one another from near and far.   

We are all relieved that vaccines for COVID-19 are beginning to be aministered. However, we need to remember that the pandemic is not behind us. It is essential that we all remain vigilant and committed as individuals and as a caring community to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 by adhering to the health protocols that protect ourselves and others. Please take a few minutes to carefully read through this updated information, which applies to students who wish to visit campus during the spring semester. Students living in the List College residence hall will be provided specific pre-entry and arrival testing and quarantine protocols by the Office of Residence Life.  We encourage all students to read this information as these important health measures are applicable everywhere.  

I also want to remind you to be kind to yourselves and encourage you to utilize the many supports and resources available, including Student Life, Residence Life, your deans and faculty, the JTS Counseling Center, and Columbia and Barnard’s health services and counseling support. All resources are available to you online.    

Our diverse student community will continue to take online classes and participate in campus life from around the world. Some students who reside in the NYC area may choose to come to our JTS campus to utilize our large indoor and outdoor (weather permitting) study spaces.  

Below is information regarding resources and protocols for JTS students who wish to enter campus at any point during the spring semester.   

Information for Students Planning to Enter JTS  

At the start of the new semester, JTS students who live in the area are welcome to come to campus at 3080 Broadway. Large outdoor and indoor study spaces will be available during JTS business hours (Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.). Spaces include the atrium, the courtyard and outdoor patios, and the Beit Midrash. (Note: The Beit Midrash will be open for study until 8 p.m. Monday-Thursday and until 4 p.m. on Friday.) Students may continue to access the JTS Library’s digital resources. You can learn more about Library services and eventual in-person access here. In addition, our dining service will be open so students may purchase delicious food to take home. Hours of operation and details will follow shortly.   

JTS ID will be required to enter campus.  

Student Responsibilities  

All JTS students are required to do the following prior to entering JTS’s campus: 

  • Sign JTS’s COVID-19 Spring Semester Community Compact. 

  • Complete a brief online COVID-19 course. 

  • Conduct daily self-screening. 

  • Participate in Columbia or Barnard’s COVID-19 testing program including gateway testing and surveillance testing.  

  • Get a flu vaccine. 

  • Follow all NY State quarantine protocols if arriving from outside of NY State. 

The signing of the JTS compact, gateway testing compliance, flu vaccination, and training completion will be linked to your JTS ID card. Students who do not fulfill each of these requirements by January 21s will have their JTS ID deactivated and will be unable to access campus until they fulfill all pre-entry requirements. 

Details for each responsibility are outlined below, including specific requirements for List College students and graduate level students.   

COVID-19 Spring Semester Community Compact 

We are pleased to share our COVID-19 Spring Semester Community Compactwhich all JTS students are required to sign prior to entering campus. The compact outlines your responsibilities as a student in order to be present in-person on campus this semester. Among other responsibilities, these include wearing face coverings, following physical distancing requirements, washing hands frequently, COVID-19 testing, and staying home when unwell. Please read through the compact carefully, and sign electronically by January 10.    

Training 

In addition to committing to abide by the COVID-19 Community Compact, all JTS students who wish to come to campus are expected to take a brief online course created for students by United Educators. This presentation reinforces the critical actions we must all take to help stop the spread of this dangerous virus. To access the online course, please follow the instructions below.    

Daily Symptom Self-Screening to Enter Campus 

Students will be required to go through a brief screening and symptom self-check each time they enter JTS’s campus. Students who plan to enter campus three or more times during the spring semester should email studentlife@jtsa.edu to reserve an app and smart thermometer. Note: all JTS students will be required to receive a negative PCR COVID-19 gateway test from Columbia Health or Barnard Health Service and sign the Community Compact prior to entering campus for the first time. (All COVID-19 testing requirements discussed herein may only be satisfied by a PCR test*.) 

COVID-19 Testing and Tracing Program 

Another crucial part of protecting the health and well-being of ourselves and our community is COVID-19 testing and contact tracing. JTS students are required to participate in Columbia Health’s testing and tracing programwhich includes a gateway test prior to entering campus, surveillance testing, contact tracing, and access to follow-up care and resources as needed. (Students enrolled in the Double Degree Program between List College and Barnard: please see below for testing information.)  

Testing is easy, convenient, and fast. The testing program does not require out-of-pocket costs or insurance billing. All test results will be provided in a timely manner, ideally within 72 hours of specimen collection. Note that testing prior to entering campus in 2021 is required of ALL JTS students, regardless of whether gateway testing was completed in summer and fall 2020 and whether they have been accessing campus previously. Students must receive a negative test result prior to entering JTS. Testing is required through Columbia Health; outside tests will not be accepted.  

List College: Joint Program/Columbia Students (Revised 1/11/2021)

Students living in the List College Residence Hall are required to schedule a COVID-19 gateway test through Columbia Health within one business day of their arrival if they are coming from within New York State or from a contiguous state and per the instructions below (“Quarantine After Arrival”) if coming from any other location. Students returning to campus can move into their residence but are then required to quarantine there except for their testing appointments and until receipt of a negative test result. Surveillance testing: Residents will be required to follow Columbia Health testing protocols and must therefore participate in twice weekly surveillance testing through Columbia Health. Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.

List College/JP students residing off-campus who will be accessing campus for the spring term are required to have a COVID-19 PCR gateway test at Columbia Health no more than 7 days before their initial entry to JTS. Students must receive a negative test result prior to entering JTS’s campus. Surveillance testing: JTS requires students to participate in surveillance COVID-19 testing once per week through Columbia Health. Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal.

List College Double Degree/Barnard Students 

  • List College students enrolled in the Double Degree program are required to follow Barnard’s testing protocols and must receive a COVID-19 gateway test from Barnard Health service within 7 days of their entry to JTS as well as twice weekly surveillance testing. Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu 

JTS Graduate-Level Students

JTS requires that all graduate-level students participate in Columbia Health’s gateway testing, surveillance,and tracing program 

  • Gateway Test: All JTS graduatelevel students who will be accessing campus for the spring term are required to have a COVID-19 PCR gateway test with Columbia Health and receive negative results within 7 days of their return to campus. Testing takes place at Columbia’s Lerner Hall, by appointment. Allow approximately 72 hours to receive results.  

  • Surveillance Testing: It is strongly recommended that after their initial gateway test, JTS graduate students who are accessing campus during the spring term undergo weekly COVID-19 diagnostic testing at Columbia Health throughout the term. 

  • Scheduling Testing: Testing is scheduled through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal. If you are unable to schedule a COVID-19 test through Columbia Health’s Online Patient Portal, e-mail covidtesttrace@columbia.edu for assistance and include your name, JTS email address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible. 

Note on the PCR Test: Also called a molecular test, a PCR test detects genetic material of the virus using a lab technique called polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A fluid sample is collected by inserting a long nasal swab (nasopharyngeal swab) into your nostril and taking fluid from the back of your nose or by using a shorter nasal swab (mid-turbinate swab) to get a sample. PCR tests are very accurate when properly performed by a health care professional, but the rapid test can miss some cases. For more information about PCR COVID-19 tests, please click HERE.   

Flu Vaccine 

In light of the continuing pandemic and flu season, flu vaccines are mandatory for students who are on campus (living in the residence hall or off-campus). If you haven’t already received a flu shot, we recommend you obtain the vaccine at the earliest opportunity, before arrival to New York.We strongly advise students who are not living in the area or coming onto campus this academic year to get a flu shot at your local pharmacy or primary care provider as wellit’s the best way to protect yourself from the flu and help conserve vital healthcare resources! 

List College/Columbia JP Students & JTS GraduateLevel StudentIf you are vaccinated prior to arrival, please follow these instructions to upload proof of your vaccine to the Columbia Health patient portal. You may also your vaccine through Columbia Health. Appointment only, no-charge flu vaccines will be offered on Columbia’s Morningside Campus. Appointments via the online patient portal are required to ensure physical distancing. Visit Columbia Health’s flu season information page for more information. 

If you were vaccinated off-campus, please upload proof of your vaccine to Columbia Health’s patient portal right away. Use this link for instructions. 

For more information visit the Columbia Health flu webpage  

List College/Barnard DD Students 

Barnard DD Students are expected to have a flu vaccine. Below is how you can register your vaccination record with Barnard College:  For  information and copies of forms, please visit https://barnard.edu/primarycare or email pchstravel@barnard.edu 

  • If you received the vaccine through Barnard’s Primary Care Health Service (PCHS), they already have this information and you do not need to take any further action. 

  • If you received the vaccine from an outside provider, please have the Influenza Vaccine Documentation Form completed by the provider and fax to PCHS 212-854-2702. 

  • If you wish to seek a religious or medical exemption from this requirement, please complete the Influenza Vaccine Exemption Form and fax it to PCHS 212-854-2702 for review for a possible exemption. 

Barnard will need this information returned in order for you to move into your on-campus residence or be included in the on-campus testing program for the spring 2021 semester. 

Quarantine upon Arrival: Traveling to NYC from outside of NY State 

All students arriving to New York from outside the United States or from a non-contiguous U.S. state are required to quarantine for a period of 10 days upon arrival consistent with Department of Health regulations for quarantine unless the following testing and quarantine guidance is met per New York State’s Executive Order 205. Contiguous states are Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont.   

  • To be eligible for a shortened quarantine through testing, students must obtain a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of departure and quarantine at home for three days prior to their departure to New York. (Note: Students who receive a positive test should not travel to New York and should remain at home and consult their health care provider.) Once in New York, students must quarantine. On day 4 of their quarantine, the student must obtain a COVID-19 test at Columbia Health or Barnard Health Service and return to their residence to continue to quarantine for another 24 to 48 hours until they receive their test result. If the test result is negative, the student may exit quarantine. 

  • Students who are not able to obtain proof of a negative COVID-19 test result before arriving to campus will need to quarantine in their residence for 10 days upon arrival. Students may get their COVID-19 gateway test at Columbia Health during their quarantine; however, they will still need to remain under the 10-day quarantine even if the gateway test result is negative. Please note that Columbia Health will not be open for COVID-19 gateway testing on weekends and holidays. 

Students residing in the List College residence hall will need to follow move-in procedures (including testing and quarantine) sent out by the Office of Residence Life.  

I appreciate your help and understanding as we all try to keep our campus community, neighbors, and loved ones as healthy as possible.  
 
Again, please remember we are here for you and feel blessed that you are part of our vibrant community. Please stay tuned for information about online student activities and fun and meaningful ways through which we can stay connected.  
 
In the meantime, I hope you enjoy the rest of winter break and wish you a healthy, safe, and rewarding spring semester. I look forward to seeing you online or on campus soon.    
 
Sincerely, 
 
Sara Horowitz 
Dean of Student Life 

Online Training About COVID-19 
 
To help slow the spread of COVID-19, we are asking students to complete a brief online course “Your Campus and COVID-19: The Road Back” to educate our community.  


All students are required to complete this course prior to entering campus. 

To begin training, follow these steps: 
 
Go to https://learn.ue.org/SD8SI992052/JTSAstudent     
 
Complete the Registration form. 

  1. Enter your first name, last name, and email address and click Register. 

  2. You will receive a welcome email with your username and a temporary password. 

  3. Follow the link in the email to sign in. 

  4. You will be prompted to: 

  • Enter your temporary password. 

  • Create a new password. 

  • Create and answer a security question. 

You will receive a confirmation email upon successful completion of the course.  
 
Need Help?  

If you have any issues with sign-in or accessing the courses, or if you did not receive your welcome email, visit the Support Portal at portalhelp.ue.org. Or click any Support Portal link on the site. 
 
All other questions should be directed to studentlife@jtsa.edu.  
 
Thank you for your time and cooperation in completing this essential training program. 

 

November 6, 2020

Spring 2021 Classes Will Be Offered Entirely Online

Dear JTS Community,

I know that many of you are eager for information about what the next semester at JTS will look like. All of us in the administration share that eagerness and have been working to give you the information you need in a timely way. Further updates will be provided in coming weeks, but we do wish to share the decision that for the spring 2021 semester, all JTS courses will be offered entirely online.

We came to this decision after weighing several factors and, as always, prioritizing the health and safety of our community. Certainly, one important factor we considered was the uptick in coronavirus infections throughout the country and uncertainty about the winter ahead. We also looked closely at our fall semester experience with online instruction. The results show clearly that since beginning classes in September, our faculty and students have displayed remarkable creativity, commitment, and resilience in making online learning the rich and meaningful experience that characterizes a JTS education. Taken together, these factors argued strongly for maintaining a model of full online instruction.

Our faculty members are now planning and designing courses for the spring and continuing to work with education technology specialists to further enrich their classes for the online environment. We are also using the suggestions from students and faculty based on this semester’s course offerings to continue enhancing the instructional experience.

Depending on health and safety conditions in the spring, we will permit small, occasional in-person class sessions on the JTS campus. Whether to hold these will depend on student and faculty interest and availability in any specific course. If such sessions do occur, they will be entirely optional, and all class sessions will continue to be offered online. As during this semester, anyone visiting the campus will be required to follow all health and safety protocols in place at the time.

Over the next couple of weeks, you can expect to receive additional information with details about other aspects of our spring semester planning. We know you are eager for this information, and we will provide it as quickly as possible.

I remind you that spring term will begin January 11, 2021. Here is the spring academic calendar.

I hope you have a successful and enjoyable continuation of the fall semester, followed by a well-deserved winter break. Wherever you are, please accept my sincere wish that you and your entire family are healthy and safe.

Sincerely,

Stephen Garfinkel
Acting Provost

August 27

Update on Entering Campus and Keeping Our Community Healthy

Dear Students,

I had so hoped to welcome our new and returning students to campus this month. Of course, what is most important is that you and your loved ones stay healthy throughout this pandemic. My prayer is that we can all be together in-person and in good health as soon as possible.

A lot has changed over the past six months but JTS remains a vibrant, diverse community of learners and leaders who care deeply about each other and the world. As we begin a new academic year, I look forward to continuing to build our incredible community in both new and familiar ways. 

I also want to remind you to be kind to yourselves and encourage you to utilize the many supports and resources available, including your deans and faculty, the JTS Counseling Center, and Columbia and Barnard’s health services and counseling support. All resources are available to you online. 

Our diverse community will be taking online classes and participating in campus life from around the globe. Some students who reside in the NYC area may choose to come to the JTS campus to utilize our large indoor and outdoor study spaces. Wherever you are, it is important that we all commit as individuals and as a caring community to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 by adhering to the health protocols that protect ourselves and others. 

Below is information regarding resources and protocols for JTS students who wish to enter campus at any point during the fall semester. However, we encourage all students to read through as these important health measures are applicable everywhere.

Information for Students Planning to Enter JTS

At the start of the new semester, JTS students who live in the area are welcome to come to campus at 3080 Broadway. Large outdoor and indoor study spaces will be available during JTS business hours (Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-7 p.m.). Spaces include the atrium, courtyard and outdoor patios (which will be tented), and the Beit Midrash. (Note: Beit Midrash will be open for study until 8 p.m.) Students may continue to access the JTS Library’s digital resources. You can learn more about Library services and eventual in-person access here. JTS ID will be required to enter campus.

Student Responsibilities

COVID-19 Community Compact and Training Presentation: We are pleased to share our COVID-19 Community Compact, which all JTS students are required to sign prior to entering campus. The compact outlines your responsibilities as a student in order to be present in-person on campus this semester. Among other responsibilities, these include: wearing face coverings, following physical distancing requirements, washing hands frequently, and staying home when unwell. Please click here to access the compact, read through it carefully, and sign electronically by September 2. 

In addition to committing to abide by the COVID-19 Community Compact, all JTS students who wish to come to campus are expected to take a brief online course created for students by United Educators. This presentation reinforces the critical actions we must all take to help stop the spread of this dangerous virus. To access the online course, please follow the instructions below.

Daily Symptom Self-Screening to Enter Campus: Students will be required to go through a brief screening and symptom self-check each time they enter JTS’s campus. Students who plan to enter campus three or more times during the fall semester should email studentlife@jtsa.edu to reserve an app and smart thermometer. Note: all JTS students will be required to receive a COVID-19 gateway test from Columbia Health and to sign the Community Compact prior to entering campus for the first time.

COVID-19 Testing and Tracing Program Update: Another crucial part of protecting the health and well-being of ourselves and our community is COVID-19 testing and contact tracing. JTS students will be part of Columbia Health’s testing and tracing program, which includes a gateway test prior to entering campus, surveillance testing, contact tracing, and access to follow-up care and resources as needed. (Students enrolled in the Double Degree Program between List College and Barnard: please see below for testing information.) Testing is easy, convenient, and fast. The testing program does not require out-of-pocket costs or insurance billing. All test results will be provided in a timely manner, ideally within 72 hours of specimen collection.

List College Students:

List College students enrolled in the Joint Program are required to follow Columbia’s School of General Studies protocols, including gateway testing as well as follow-up surveillance testing in order to enter Columbia or JTS’s campus. 

List College students enrolled in the Double Degree program are required to follow Barnard’s testing protocols and must receive a gateway test in order to enter JTS’s campus. An email message will be sent out this week from Barnard’s Primary Care Service with detailed instructions. Questions about Barnard’s testing program can be sent to covidtesting@barnard.edu.

Graduate-level students: JTS requires that all graduate-level students participate in Columbia Health’s gateway testing, surveillance, and tracing program.

Gateway Test: JTS graduate-level students must receive an initial gateway test at Columbia’s Lerner Hall, by appointment, within 14 days of your first planned visit to JTS’s campus. Allow approximately 72 hours to receive results. To schedule your gateway test (Monday through Friday), email covidtesttrace@columbia.edu and include your name, JTS e-mail address, and preferred test date and time of day. The team will schedule your appointment as close to your preference as possible.

Ongoing Surveillance Testing: JTS graduate students, after their initial gateway test, will be randomly sampled for COVID-19, with an initial cohort of 5% each week during the semester; this frequency and sample size will be adapted based on key COVID-19 indicators. The frequency of the testing will be re-evaluated over time in view of the status of the epidemic in New York City and the campus.

We appreciate your help and understanding as we all try to keep our campus community, neighbors and loved ones as healthy as possible.

Again, please remember we are here for you and feel blessed that you are part of our vibrant community. I can’t wait to meet our new students online very soon! Please stay tuned for information about online student activities and fun and meaningful ways through which we can stay connected.

In the meantime, I wish you a healthy, safe, and rewarding semester. For those whom I may soon see on campus or in Morningside Heights, please know that I will be enthusiastically smiling at you from behind my mask.

Sincerely,

Sara Horowitz
Dean of Student Life

Online Course About COVID-19

To help slow the spread of COVID-19, we are asking students to complete a brief online course “Your Campus and COVID-19: The Road Back” to educate our community.

The deadline to complete this course is September 2.

To begin training, follow these steps:

Go to https://learn.ue.org/SD8SI992052/JTSAstudent    

Complete the Registration form.

  1. Enter your first name, last name, and email address and click Register.
  2. You will receive a welcome email with your username and a temporary password.
  3. Follow the link in the email to sign in.
  4. You will be prompted to:
    • Enter your temporary password
    • Create a new password
    • Create and answer a security question

You will receive a confirmation email upon successful completion of the course.

Need Help?

If you have any issues with sign-in or accessing the courses, or if you did not receive your welcome email, visit the Support Portal at portalhelp.ue.org. Or click any Support Portal link on the site.

All other questions should be directed to studentlife@jtsa.edu.

Thank you for your time and cooperation in completing this essential training program.

August 18

Details on Fall Semester

Dear List College Students, 

Following up on Chancellor Schwartz’s Friday letter, I would like to provide further details about the fall semester at JTS. 

Thanks to the hard work and creativity of our faculty and staff, you will find a semester filled with engaging academics, a warm sense of community, and inspiring religious life. While we would have all preferred to be able to see each other in person, we have confidence that you will still be deeply enriched by the JTS experience, albeit in a different way. 

Here are the details:
 
Academics
Last March, JTS, along with almost all North American colleges and universities, made the emergency decision to shift immediately to online learning. Courses were moved quickly to Zoom, and thanks to our faculty’s hard work and our students’ positive attitude, we were able to complete the semester quite effectively. As soon as it became likely—and then certain—that the fall 2020 semester would also be virtual, we expended significant time, effort, and funds working with faculty to prepare online courses that we expect to be as interactive, exciting, and challenging as classes held onsite.

Working with the Columbia Center for Teaching and Learning, we developed an approach to faculty training based on feedback from student surveys and faculty members’ own reflections on the spring semester. Faculty members undertook additional work by themselves and with colleagues in their disciplines, participating in workshops and discussions both as a whole and in smaller groups. To further enhance our online program, JTS has engaged a full-time learning designer and educational technologist who will be available to help faculty in crafting their courses to employ a wide variety of digital options. 

Among the advantages we have at JTS are our small class size and low faculty to student ratio, which allow us to create an intimate learning experience regardless of the medium. You can expect fall courses to include segments when the instructor and entire class study together—that is, “synchronously”—while making sure to take periodic breaks. Most courses will also include components where students work with a few other classmates in Zoom breakout rooms or ḥevruta partnering groups and then rejoin the whole class to continue discussions of themes, primary sources, and secondary material. At other times, students may have one-on-one discussions with faculty members, work on group projects, or be guided toward other innovative ways to explore foundational course issues.

Although high-quality virtual instruction takes extra effort and training, our faculty members are eager to reconnect with students, from first-year undergraduates to experienced doctoral candidates, and to guide and inspire them throughout the coming semester.

Student Life
Our Office of Student Life has planned many opportunities to build community and create an “online campus” this fall. Staff and student leaders are eager to welcome first-year students during orientation week, which begins Sunday, August 30. First-years will have a chance to learn about student services and get to know their classmates by participating in workshops, information sessions, and various community-building activities. Orientation will also include online events with Columbia’s School of General Studies and Barnard College. 

Throughout the semester, there will be activities for all students to enjoy, including informal learning and conversation with JTS faculty, social justice initiatives, our artist-in-residence program, cooking events, virtual tours of NYC museums and parks, movie nights, talent nights, and more. Our Jewish Life directors will offer online events to help all students explore their Jewish identities, deepen their understanding of holidays, and celebrate together as a community. The creative leaders of our List College Student Council will keep our vibrant and spirited List College community connected and active.   

In addition to campus life at JTS, we encourage students to participate in online activities with the Columbia/Barnard Hillel. Their excellent team will give you a chance to gather with the diverse Columbia and Barnard Jewish community. 

Health and Wellness  
Your physical and mental health remain our highest priority. During the semester, students will have access to online resources from wherever you reside. 
  
JTS: Our JTS Counseling Center team will be available to provide individual counseling to students and will offer online programming to assist with stress reduction and other challenges that many of us are facing at this moment in our lives. Please don’t hesitate to contact counseling@jtsa.edu or call 212-280-6161.   

Columbia: Columbia Health will be available to students through telehealth. In addition, students have access to Columbia’s Counseling and Psychological Services for individual counseling as well as Alice! (Columbia’s health education program), which will provide virtual programming and supportive online spaces.  

Barnard: Barnard’s Primary Care Health Services will be available to all Barnard students online. Furman Counseling Center services will include individual counseling sessions via telehealth, consultation for outside referrals, virtual groups, and an emergency, after-hours clinician on call. Well Woman and Health Education will continue all programming sessions virtually. 

Tuition and Fees
You will receive your updated fall semester bill in the coming weeks. Recognizing that many students and families are facing financial hardship during these trying times, we made the decision earlier this summer that there would be no increase in JTS tuition for the coming year. In addition, we are reducing the service fee and the orientation fee by 10 percent. 

Financial Aid
We are committed to maintaining the same proportion of need-based financial aid that was previously awarded. All students receiving need-based financial aid will receive an updated award letter from the Financial Aid Office in the coming weeks. This letter will outline a reduced cost of attendance based on a student’s living arrangements for the fall semester. As a default, the Financial Aid Office will use an “at-home” housing rate to calculate a student’s cost of attendance. If you will be living in an off-campus apartment in New York City, you must email the Financial Aid Office at financialaid@jtsa.edu no later than Wednesday, August 19, to ensure your financial aid letter is accurate.

For Students Living in the Area
If you reside in the New York area, you will have access to the JTS campus. You will be informed about on-campus activities such as religious services and Library operations in future communications. 

Spring Semester
We remain hopeful that we will be able to welcome students to our new residence hall and our beautiful new campus for the spring semester. JTS will continue to monitor the public health situation as well as all guidelines and New York State regulations in the coming months, and we will let you know as soon as possible during the fall semester if we are able to offer residential life in the spring. 

While we had very much hoped to welcome you to campus this fall, we are confident that the upcoming semester will offer the academic excellence and rich community engagement that define a JTS education. With the commitment to innovation we’ve seen from the faculty, staff, and administration throughout the summer, I have no doubt that we will continue to meet the needs of all our students in the semester ahead.

Please know that my colleagues and I are here to answer all of your questions, and we look forward to being in touch with you in the coming days. 

Sincerely, 

Marc Gary
Executive Vice Chancellor and COO

August 14

Chancellor Announces Residence Hall Will Be Closed for Fall; All Classes Offered Online 

Dear Students,

I write to you today with a sense of tremendous sadness. As I explained when I announced our fall plans earlier this summer, we would continue to monitor the trajectory of the pandemic and change course if the situation warranted it. With great regret, I must now share the news that the undergraduate residence hall will not open for the fall semester. 

As you may know, earlier today, our partners at Columbia and Barnard announced a move to all-remote learning for the fall and with few exceptions will have no undergraduates living on campus. Our undergraduate dual-degree programs are so entwined with theirs that a residential experience for JTS students would suffer considerably without the integrative experiences with Columbia/Barnard so essential to our program’s mission.

Our decision was influenced as well by the alarming nationwide spike in the rate of coronavirus infections since I wrote to you in July. While the strict measures taken by New York have succeeded in controlling the virus, we could not ignore the uncertainty presented by surging caseloads in so many other regions.

We know that many questions will arise as a result of this decision, and I assure you that we will provide you with further details next week.

All fall courses will continue to be offered online. Our faculty have spent the summer months working with education technology specialists to design their courses in ways that will offer robust learning and discussion. I have no doubt you will find these courses engaging, stimulating and meaningful. Moreover, you will also find connection and community through creative virtual programming, gatherings, activities and tefillah, offered through the deans’ offices, the Office of Student Life, Women’s League Seminary Synagogue, and other JTS departments. Please remember that your deans, administration, and counseling center staff are available, as always, to support you.

I appreciate how difficult it is to shift course once your expectations have been set. I know how excited many of you were about returning to campus and how disappointed you must feel to learn that you won’t be able to do so. I share your disappointment. My colleagues and I miss you terribly; your energy and passion are the lifeblood of this institution, and it won’t be the same until you are back.

We feel especially saddened for our first-year students, who were eager to begin college with the traditional experience of residential and campus life. I know this beginning will be different than you imagined, but everyone at JTS is eager to welcome you and help you integrate into our community.

We look forward to a time soon when we can see you all here in person, and we will do everything in our power to make that return possible. In the meantime, we will rededicate our efforts to further strengthening the rich academic, religious, and communal experiences that—even virtually—define a JTS education.

I hope that all of us will respond to this time of challenge by deepening our sense of unity and purpose, finding nourishing support and friendship in this extraordinary community.

Shabbat Shalom,

Dr. Shuly Rubin Schwartz

Chancellor

JTS Alumni Donors 2020

Each year, JTS alumni around the world make generous contributions to support the next generation of students. We extend our heartfelt gratitude for these gifts. Thank you, and we hope you’ll consider supporting JTS again as you plan your future giving.

A special thank you to the JTS alumni who have included JTS in their estate plans. They are esteemed members of the JTS Tzaddikim Society who care deeply about the Jewish future and have made a commitment to leave a lasting legacy at JTS. For more information on how you can become part of this special group, or if you have already included JTS estate plans, please contact Lucy Posner, Director of Planned Giving at (212) 678-8865 or plannedgiving@jtsa.edu.

See all of our alumni supporters listed below by school.

List College

Rachel Ain
Michal Ashkenazi
Vadim Avshalumov
Nicole Berman
Erin Beser
Shachar Binyamin
Naomi Bloom-Wurtman
Eliav Bock
Talya Bock
Hannah Brody
Deborah Bromberg Seltzer
Benjamin Brown
Sara Bucholtz
Andrea Chase
Suzanne Chipkin
Simeon Cohen
Robbie Cohen-Millstein
Bennett Decker
Cory Doliner
Benjamin Ehrlich
Uriel Epelbaum
Shoshana Farbman
Ariel Fein
Nora Feinstein
Lilli Flink
Deena Fox
Rivka Friedman
Ilana Garber
Yaffa Garber Tilles
Reena Glazer
Richard Gratz
Reva Greenbaum
Miriam Greenblatt-Weidberg
Amy Greenfield Green
Yonatan Grossman-Broder
Sarah Haiken
Diane Halivni
Eytan Hammerman
Rebecca Hammerman
Yael Hammerman
Anna Hanau
Jodi Hirsch-Rein

Danielle Holtz
Jaime Horowitz
Judith Horwitz Glassenberg
Alison Joseph
Rafael Kaiserblueth
David Kalender
Tracy Kaplowitz
Michelle Katz
Doron Kenter
Abigail Kerbel
Samuel Kerbel
Daniel Kestin
Orly Klein
Suzanne Kling Langman
Daniela Kogan
Helene Kornsgold
Meryl Kramer Brown
William Krieger
Judy Krinitz
Rachel Lappen
Elie Lehmann
Chavie Lescher
Jacob Levenfeld
David Levy
Joshua Lieberman
Anya Manning
Paul Margulies
Jenna Marks
Andrea Merow
Rebekah Monson
Uri Monson
Daniel Moss
Shira Osher
Susan Palefsky
Ari Paul
Abigail Pickus
Rhea Plosker
Jonah Rank
Richard Reaven
Sarah Rebarber
Jessica Rezak Schwab
Daniela Rojzman

Pauline Rose
Ariella Rosen
Michelle Rosen Sapir
Dena Roth
Robin Rubenstein
Jeremy Ruberg
Noa Rubin
Ariel Russo
Matthew Russo
Evan Schaffer
David Schnitzer
Yoni Schwab
Andrea Schwartz
Gil Schwartz
Jocelyn Seidenfeld
Shoshana Sernik
Ellen Shaw
Erez Sherman
Rachel Siegel
Kenneth Sperber
Tova Sperber
Jeffrey Spitzer
Miriam Spitzer
Sarah Steinmann
Victoria Stempel
Spencer Szwalbenest
Alissa Talamo
Charlene Thrope
Rachel Tolub
Danielle Truglio
Justin Truglio
Laurie Turnof
Gabriella Wachs
Daniel Walker
Shira Wallach
Jake Wassermann
Aliza Weinstock
Emily Winograd
David Wise
Ellen Wolintz-Fields
Rebecca Zimmerman

The Gershon Kekst Graduate School

Ellen Abramson
Benjamin Adler
Carl Astor
Carol Bakhos
Kenneth Berger
Beth Bernstein
Ruth Bloomfield Margolin
Carol Booth
Deborah Bromberg Seltzer
Naomi Brunnlehrman
Ellen Cahn
Nina Cardin
Margaret Cella
Geoffrey Claussen
Martin Cohen
Ruth Corson
Debbie Cosgrove
Judy Craig
Amy Cytryn
Eliezer Diamond
Stephanie Dickstein
Michael Dobbs
Alisa Doctoroff
Debra Edelman
Charles Edelsburg
Judith Eisenberg
Beth Finger
David Fishman
Joan Freeman
Deborah Geller
Esther Gold
Megan GoldMarche
Alisha Goodman
Israel Gordan
Ariel Greenberg Platt
Beverly Gribetz
Nellie Harris
Robert Harris
Judith Hauptman
Jordan Hersh
Marc Hirshman

Sara Jamison
Arianna Jeret
Isaac Jeret
Naomi Kalish
Amy Kalmanofsky
Karen Kaplan
Lawrence Katz
Jan Kaufman
Allan Kensky
Barry Kenter
Melissa Kerbel
Suzanne Kling Langman
Shelley Kniaz
Lori Koffman
Daniela Kogan
David Kraemer
Jonathan Kremer
Sarah Krinsky
Helene Krupnick
Bryna Kurtz
Judd Levingston
Kim Levone
David Levy
Howard Lifshitz
Adele Lobel
Jonathan Lopatin
Ari Lucas
Mitchel Malkus
Guy Massie
Lisa Micley
Rachel Mikva-Rosenberg
Deborah Miller
Michael Panitz
Micah Peltz
Carl Perkins
Martha Pollack
Irit Printz
Jonah Rank
Mark Raphael
Esther Reed
Steven Rein

Steven Rein
Avram Reisner
Adam Roffman
Paula Rose
Ariella Rosen
Daniel Rosenberg
Zahava Rosenfeld
Gil Rosenthal
Amy Roth
Marian Rothenberg
Shuly Rubin Schwartz
Mickey Safra
Susan Sandler
Robert Scheinberg
Jane-Rachel Schonbrun
Andrea Schwartz
Aviva Schwartz
Marcus Schwartz
Judith Shapero
Dina Shargel
Lorraine Sherman
Robert Sherman
Robyn Shoulson
Marion Shulevitz
Andrew Siegel
Anyce Siegel
Laurie Siegel
Nancy Sinkoff
Diana Sklar
Fran Snyder
Arielle Solomon
Jeffrey Spitzer
Alan Stern
Lori Sumberg
Ravid Tilles
Burton Visotzky
Martin Werber
Ethan Witkovsky
Ellen Wolintz-Fields
Deborah Zuker
Judith Zupnick

H. L. Miller Cantorial School

Nancy Abramson
Robert Albert
Rebecca Carl
Kathryn Claussen
Farid Dardashti
Elisheva Dienstfrey
Perry Fine
Adam Frei

Arthur Giglio
Israel Gordan
Lilly Kaufman
David Lipp
Erica Lippitz
Alberto Mizrahi
Misha Pisman
Alisa Pomerantz-Boro

Sidney Rabinowitz
Harold Rifkin
Jonathan Schultz
Stephen Stein
David Tilman
Eliot Vogel
Saul Wachs
Elaine Zimmerman

The Rabbinical School

Kassel Abelson
A. Nathan Abramowitz
Benjamin Adler
Rachel Ain
Morris Allen
Robert Alpert
Joel Alter
David Arzt
Carl Astor
Toba August
Shaina Bacharach
Marvin Bash
Lia Bass
David Baum
Laurence Bazer
Joshua Ben-Gideon
Rebecca Ben-Gideon
Chaya Bender
Alfred Benjamin
Kenneth Berger
Mark Biller
Mark Bisman
Eliav Bock
David Booth
Geoffrey Botnick
Shoshana Boyd Gelfand
Akiva Brilliant
Joseph Brodie
Howard Buechler
Richard Camras
Debra Cantor
Arianna Capptauber
Nina Cardin
Margaret Cella
Benjamin Chaidell
Gary Charlestein
Marim Charry
Joel Chernikoff
Ammos Chorny
Geoffrey Claussen
Alan Cohen
Burton Cohen
Martin Cohen
Simeon Cohen
Moshe Corson
Elliot Cosgrove
Tirza Covel-Schmelzer
Donald Crain
Gary Creditor
Melissa Crespy
Adam Cutler
Eric Cytryn
Michelle Dardashti
Alexander Davis
Mark Diamond
Stephanie Dickstein
Bob Dobrusin
Elliot Dorff
Gilah Dror
Moshe Edelman
Richard Eisenberg
Bernard Eisenman
Joshua Elkin
Gideon Estes
Nathaniel Ezray
Edwin Farber
Ted Feldman
Azriel Fellner
Lyle Fishman
Michael Friedland
Ilana Garber
Nechama Goldberg
Robert Goldenberg
Daniel Goldfarb
Megan GoldMarche
Marv Goodman
Sarah Graff
Michael Greenbaum
Ariel Greenberg Platt
Miriam Greenblatt-Weidberg
Gary Greene
Mark Greenspan
Edward Greenstein
Frederick Grossman
Mayer Gruber
Nicole Guzik
Eytan Hammerman
Richard Hammerman
Yael Hammerman
Robert Harris
Abraham Havivi
Eliezer Havivi
Joshua Heller
Lester Hering
Jordan Hersh
Howard Hoffman
Samuel Hollander

Rachel Isaacs 
Ronald Isaacs
Alan Iser
Isaac Jeret
Rafael Kaiserblueth
David Kalender
Naomi Kalish
Jeremy Kalmanofsky
Elana Kanter
Rafi Kanter
Louis Kaplan
Tracy Kaplowitz
Barry Katz
Michael Katz
Lilly Kaufman
Stanley Kazan
Stuart Kelman
Allan Kensky
Barry Kenter
Paul Kerbel
Sheldon Kirsch
Shelley Kniaz
Lori Koffman
Randall Konigsburg
Mary Brett Koplen
Helene Kornsgold
Jay Kornsgold
Charles Kraus
Harold Kravitz
Jonathan Kremer
Sarah Krinsky
Aaron Krupnick
Neil Kurshan
Vernon Kurtz
Benay Lappe
Robert Layman
William Lebeau
David Lerner
Alan Lettofsky
Morton Levine
Judd Levingston
Chai Levy
David Levy
Shalom Lewis
Sheldon Lewis
Norman Lewison
Dan Liben
Howard Lifshitz
Steven Lindemann
Jonathan Lubliner
Alan Lucas
Ari Lucas
Lisa Malik
Mitchel Malkus
Mark Mallach
Eliot Malomet
Howard Mandell
Noam Marans
Jeffrey Marker
Barry Marks
Myrna Matsa
Jonathan Medows
Aryeh Meir
Andrea Merow
Joel Meyers
Michael Meyerstein
Clifford Miller
Raphael Miller
Victor Mirelman
Jack Moline
Loren Monosov
Beth Naditch
David Nelson
Daniel Nevins
Debra Newman Kamin
Max Nissen
Daniel Novick
George Nudell
Michael Panitz
Lee Paskind
Micah Peltz
Sheldon Pennes
Carl Perkins
Joel Pitkowsky
Richard Plavin
Charles Popky
Bezalel Porten
Irit Printz
Joshua Rabin
Mayer Rabinowitz
Amy Rader
Michael Ragozin
Jonah Rank
Mark Raphael
Moshe Re’em
Esther Reed
Steven Rein

Avram Reisner
David Resnick
Mira Rivera
Adam Roffman
Carnie Rose
Paula Rose
Ariella Rosen
Elliott Rosen
Daniel Rosenberg
Herbert Rosenblum
Shira Rosenblum
David Rosenn
Gil Rosenthal
Amy Roth
Joel Roth
Moshe Rothblum
Richard Rubenstein
Steven Rubenstein
Jeremy Ruberg
Robert Rubin
Ariel Russo
Mickey Safra
Alexander Salzberg
Neil Sandler
Craig Scheff
Robert Scheinberg
Raymond Scheindlin
Jonathan Schnitzer
Aaron Schonbrun
Ismar Schorsch
Joel Schwab
Charles Schwartz
Marcus Schwartz
Moshe Schwartz
Steven Schwartz
Ahud Sela
Bruce Seltzer
Laurence Serbert
Yehuda Shabatay
Dina Shargel
Leonard Sharzer
Erez Sherman
Sanford Shudnow
Marion Shulevitz
Diana Siegel
Steven Silberman
Joseph Simckes
Charles Simon
Michael Singer
Melvin Sirner
Gerald Skolnik
Jonathan Slater
David Soloff
Elliott Spar
Miriam Spitzer
Harvey Spivak
Mychal Springer
Murray Stadtmauer
David Steinhardt
Ari Sunshine
Sheldon Switkin
Kenneth Tarlow
Paul Teicher
Albert Thaler
Malcolm Thomson
Ravid Tilles
Jennifer Tobenstein
Mervin Tomsky
Annie Tucker
Danielle Upbin-Weizman
Stanley Urbas
Daniel Victor
Burton Visotzky
Shira Wallach
Michael Wasserman
Jonathan Waxman
Deborah Wechsler
Stefan Weinberg
Cara Weinstein Rosenthal
Philip Weintraub
Samuel Weintraub
Miriam Weisel
Raysh Weiss
David Weizman
H. Scott White
Aryeh Wineman
Edmund Winter
David Wise
Ethan Witkovsky
Jeffrey Wohlberg
Ellen Wolintz-Fields
Eric Yanoff
Herbert Yoskowitz
Jerry Zelizer
Deborah Zuker

Teachers Institute and Seminary College

Nancy Abramson
Robert Alpert
Judith Berman
Fredda Bisman
Elizabeth Bloch-Smith
Annette Botnick
Geoffrey Botnick
Joseph Brodie
Miriam Brous
Steven Brown
Nina Cardin
Paula Charry
Joel Chernikoff
Jeanette Chiel
Ammos Chorny
Alan Cohen
Gary Creditor
Aryeh Davidson
Stephanie Dickstein
Lynne Diwinsky
Marlynn Dorff
Risa Doris
David Eligberg
Edwin Farber
Ruth Fath
Judith Fellner
Donna Fishman
Daniel Flamberg
Eric Forster

Bella Goldstine
Rosalyn Gooen Milians
Gary Greene
Mark Greenspan
Edward Greenstein
Beverly Gribetz
Richard Hammerman
Robert Harris
Judith Hauptman
Eliezer Havivi
Lester Hering
Rita Herskovitz
Marc Hirshman
Howard Hoffman
Carol Ingall
Ronald Isaacs
Harold Kasimow
Stuart Kelman
Victoria Kelman
Paul Kerbel
Francine Klagsbrun
Samuel Klagsbrun
Shoshana Joy Knapp
Jay Kornsgold
David Kraemer
Risa Krohn
Aaron Krupnick
Helene Krupnick
Alisa Kurshan

Joel Laitman
Jonathan Levin
Susanna Levin
Sherwood Malamud
Robert Manstein
Sandra Meyers
Michael Meyerstein
Jeannette Miller
Raphael Miller
Aviva Peress
Adina Re’em
Avram Reisner
Judith Rohn
Menorah Rotenberg
Jonathan Schwartz
Ruth Shapiro
Frida Shudnow
David Sidorsky
Anyce Siegel
Chana Simckes
Priva Simon
Esther Stern-Bloom
Kenneth Tarlow
Karen Vogel
Vicky Vossen
Saul Wachs
Leonard Wasserman
Pearl Weiss

The William Davidson School

Rachel Ain
Michele Alperin
Joel Alter
Ofra Backenroth
David Baum
Chaya Bender
Eliav Bock
Talya Bock
Sharon Brooks
Benjamin Chaidell
Simeon Cohen
Treasure Cohen
Michelle Dardashti
Alexander Davis
Dov Emerson
Betsy Forester
Ilana Garber
Israel Gordan
Daniel Graber
Miriam Greenblatt-Weidberg
Gary Greene

Marilyn Greenspan
E. Joseph Griminger
Yael Hammerman
Wendy Heller
Samuel Hollander
Tracy Kaplowitz
Abigail Kerbel
Jane Kessler
Daniela Kogan
Michelle Konigsburg
Helene Kornsgold
Judd Levingston
Mitchel Malkus
Andrea Merow
Deborah Miller
Orlea Miller
Beth Naditch
Max Nissen
Daniel Novick
Sheila Panitz
Micah Peltz

Joshua Rabin
Amy Ripps
Frieda Robins
Daniel Rosenberg
Shira Rosenblum
Jeremy Ruberg
Ariel Russo
Sharon Safra
Aaron Schonbrun
Charles Schwartz
Moshe Schwartz
Anna Serviansky
Terri Soifer
Sara Stave Beckerman
Joshua Troderman
Annie Tucker
Daniel Victor
Suzi Wainer
Aliza Weinstock
Joel Weissglass
Eric Yanoff

Center for Pastoral Education

Sheri Allen
Arianna Capptauber
Simeon Cohen
Michael Friedland
Megan GoldMarche
Israel Gordan
Ariel Greenberg Platt
Jordan Hersh

Lori Koffman
Mary Brett Koplen
Molly O’Neil Frank
Joshua Rabin
Mira Rivera
Amy Roth
Ariel Russo
Alexander Salzberg

Eva Sax-Bolder
Jonathan Schultz
John Shellito
Ian Silverman
Ravid Tilles
Philip Weintraub
Ethan Witkovsky

Tzaddikim Society

Kassel Abelson
Bella Bergman (z”l)
Erica Goldman-Brodie and Joseph Brodie
Moshe Corson
Donald D. Crain
Gideon Estes
Cindy and Michael B. Greenbaum
Sheila Diamant Hecht 

Carol Ingall
Karen and Jonathan Kaplan
Lilly Kaufman
Ruth and Robert Layman
Sheldon Lewis
Herbert Lukashok (z”l)
Eliot P. Marrus
Raphael Ostrovsky (z”l)
Richard Plavin
Jack Riemer

Lifsa and Stanley Joshua Schachter
Lori and David C. Seed
Henry Sosland (z”l)
Joshua Stampfer (z”l)
Malcolm Thomson
Annie Tucker
Burton L. Visotzky
Marilyn S. Werman (z”l)

129th Commencement Exercises


May 18, 2023   |  27 Iyar 5783
10:30 AM E.T.


At Commencement

Rabbi Arthur Green will deliver the Commencement Address

Honorary Degrees will be conferred upon:

Rabbi Arthur Green
Philip Ozuah, MD, PhD
Rabbi David Saperstein
Ms. Alicia Svigals

Graduating Students

Marissa Aaronson

Jocelyn Rose Abrams

Gerald Adler

Victoria Ayn Ardelean

Eden Rose Astorino

Adam Daniel Aviram

Jacob Matthew Baumstein

Adam Geoffrey Bender

Alyx Bernstein

Arieh Michael Bright

Joshua Ezra Brunnlehrman

Yi Mei Chiang

Dan Amiran Cohen

Ian Mark Cohen

Shulamit Crevoshay

Ronald F. Daitz

Gabriel Maxwell Drill

Joshua Modiano Ehrlich

Jayme Gayle Epstein

Zachary Aaron Fisher

Benjamin Zachary Forester

Teri Franco

Stefanie Marisa Gedan

Adam Joseph Gillman

Rory Alyse Glantz

Grace Elizabeth Gleason

Lindsay J. Goldman

Maia Lynn Golzar Anderson

Israel Moses Gordan

Rishe Groner

Samuel Noah Grossman

Sarah Lindsey Gruber

Rebecca Margalit Guralnik

Alex Michael Hamilton

Alexa Nicole Hirsch

Solomon Rubin Hoffman

Noga Hurwitz

Aviva Beth Kamens

Pamela Kekst

Sarah Marissa Klein

Gavriella Ayelet Kornsgold

Jacob Solomon Kotlicky

Rubén Kraiem

Joshua Seth Ladon

Aaron Philip Leven

Jonah Lubow

Sophia Malovany

Benjamin Aaron Mann

Alice Rose Manning

Max Ryan Mezrow

Ryan Levi Milkman

Aaron Joshua Morrill

Marilyn Selby Okoshi

Benjamin David Pagovich

Jonah Nadav Pitkowsky

Arin Leah Pogany

Noah Loren Rachels

Hadassah Naomi Richman

Natanya Shira Rosen

Kimberly Samantha Rosenthal

Emanuella Rozenfeld

Arielle Sabot

Michale Bess Schueler

Samuel Mark Slater

Bailey Drew Tischler

Hadassah Netanya Turk Tolub

Zoe Beth Weinberg

Andrew Benjamin Weissfeld

Nicholas El-Eini Whitman

Boaz Kenneth Willis

Amelia Freida Rackner Wolf

Kristine Heewon Yi

Peter Erwin Young


In The Media

As a leading scholar of modern American Judaism, Dr. Schwartz is frequently called on by journalists to offer insight into Jewish history and current affairs. Here is a sampling of recent media citations and articles by Dr. Schwartz.

Public Lectures

Antisemitism in America: How Did We Get Here and How Do We Move Forward?

From Jewess Jeans to Juicy Japs: Clothing and Jewish Stereotypes

Podcast

In this episode of the JTS podcast What Now? Dr. Schwartz shares the mourning and remembering practices, some innovative and some ancient, that have supported her family through even the most wrenching of bereavements. 

Listen now

Commentary: Torah and Holidays

Adele Ginzberg’s Sukkah

Such a luscious array of branches and gourds proudly displayed by Adele Ginzberg—wife of JTS Talmud professor Louis Ginzberg—as she prepared to once again adorn the JTS sukkah! This photo from The JTS Library evokes for me the loving care with which many early 20th-century JTS faculty wives cultivated religious spirit and community. Ginzberg, or “Mama G.” as she was known, inherited the JTS sukkah project from Mathilde Schechter.

Read more

Power and Gender in the Wilderness (Parashat Korah)

When Korah and his followers spurned the Lord, “The earth opened its mouth and swallowed them up with their households” (Num. 16:32). This strange parashah has always puzzled and disturbed me. What exactly did Korah and his followers do to merit such swift, cruel divine judgment?

Read more 

Courses of Grief (Parashat Hukkat)

Many are the paths of grieving, and they are irrational and ever shifting. This week’s parashah, which includes the deaths of Miriam and Aaron, gives us the opportunity to reflect on the grieving process.  

Read more

Human Lives and the Natural World (Sukkot)

For many of us who live in dense metropolitan areas, spending time in national parks gives us a unique opportunity to experience in more immediate fashion the majesty of our world. Vacationing in the Canadian Rockies this past summer—hiking in mountains, walking on glaciers, boating in deep blue lakes, cooling off in the spray of gorgeous waterfalls, identifying rare birds, and seeing moose, elk, deer, and the occasional bear (thankfully from a distance)—I felt awed and fortunate to behold this.

Read more

Message from Dr. Schwartz

Dear JTS Community,

I feel deeply privileged to have been chosen to be the eighth chancellor of The Jewish Theological Seminary.

For over a century, JTS—through the leaders it graduates and the ideas, resources, and values it disseminates—has played an essential role in fueling the intellectual, religious, and communal vitality of Jewish life. As a historian of American Jewry, I have seen its sweeping impact—in university Jewish studies programs, synagogues, federations, camps, schools, JCCs, and Jewish social service and justice organizations. I have seen its impact in my own life as a third-generation JTS alumna, and in the lives of the thousands of students I’ve had the good fortune of teaching and mentoring as a long-time dean, professor, and provost. Our students and alumni provide intellectual, religious, and communal leadership across the country and the globe, and bring a Jewish ethical lens to their careers, volunteer efforts, and personal lives.

I am honored to have the opportunity as chancellor to shape this institution’s future with each of you. JTS’s mission has never been more important. We are living through trying times, filled with unprecedented challenges and uncertainty as a result of the Covid-19 virus. Even in the past three months as we transitioned to virtual learning and community building, we at JTS have learned so much about how to best engage with each other—wherever we are. Each of us is hungering for a greater sense of meaning and coherence in a world plagued by pain and insecurity. JTS offers an intellectual encounter with both our tradition and the current moment that can serve as a gateway to engaging the heart, soul, and spirit—essential elements to shaping a meaningful new normal.

During this current moment and in the years that follow, JTS must expand upon its strengths and seize new opportunities to strengthen the foundation for the future of the Jewish people. For over a century, JTS has played critically important and overlapping roles in the Jewish world; my vision for the future builds upon each of them.

●      Together, we will further strengthen JTS as a premier institution of higher learning, for knowledge lies at the core of everything that we do. As JTS’s first female student, the brilliant and renowned founder of Hadassah, Henrietta Szold asserted, “The Jewish heart has always starved unless it was fed by the Jewish intellect.” Through critical and reflective Jewish learning taught by a renowned faculty dedicated to a robust Jewish future, JTS engages students with the varied texts and experiences of the Jewish people—from biblical poetry to Israeli poetry, 16th-century mysticism to contemporary memoirs, Jewish theology to gender studies. I want to amplify JTS’s distinctive approach to Jewish learning by enhancing our academic and library offerings in a variety of fields and making it available not only to our degree students but to a wider audience of intellectually inclined adults eager for challenging study with leading scholars and attentive peers. Learning is, after all, a lifelong pursuit, and JTS can broaden its offerings to promote new levels of engagement.

●      I see JTS’s role as a religious institution as a hallmark of its identity, a place where serious academic Jewish learning is integrated organically into a sacred, caring community and where the rhythms of the Jewish calendar pulsate throughout the institution in ever expanding ways. To animate Jewish life and realize Jewish values in the future, JTS students will first experience—hopefully soon in our gorgeous new spaces—vibrant Jewish religious and communal living, through prayer, ritual, artistic endeavors, and acts of lovingkindness and justice.

●      The Jewish community looks to JTS as a guiding hand, and JTS’s moral voice helps frame and clarify the complexities and challenges of our ever-changing world. I hope to share that voice more broadly, both in North America and abroad, at a time when the world desperately needs compelling ethical leadership. Daily we witness poverty, inequality, environmental devastation, and more; each of us can do more to improve our world, to pursue justice as the Torah commands. JTS as an institution can amplify the Jewish wisdom that will inform and propel our efforts. 

●      JTS’s relationship to Conservative Judaism has always played a significant role in its identity. Conservative Judaism provides a unique approach to Jewish learning and living, Jewish law, and Zionism, an approach that is authentic both to the past and to the current era. I look forward to working with Conservative and Masorti Movement leaders in identifying opportunities for enhanced cooperation and collaborative efforts.

I care profoundly about this institution, and I know that you do, too. Over the next weeks and months, I plan to hold a series of discussions with the full range of constituencies that make up the JTS community. I hope you will join me. And for those of you whom I’ve not yet had the opportunity to meet, until we are able to meet in person, I invite you to visit the section of our website where you can learn more about my background and vision for the future.

I am humbled by the confidence that the Board of Trustees and members of the Search Committee have invested in me. I am so grateful for the collegial support and friendship of JTS faculty and administrative colleagues with whom I’ve worked for so many years. I especially want to thank Chancellor Arnold Eisen, who has led JTS with clarity of vision, passion, and wisdom for the past 13 years, for his support and guidance. I am eager to get to work, harnessing the energy, passion, and dedication that so many feel for our beloved institution.

Together we will ensure a flourishing future.

Sincerely,

Shuly Rubin Schwartz

About Dr. Shuly Rubin Schwartz

Bio of Shuly Rubin Schwartz

Dr. Shuly Rubin Schwartz, selected as the eighth chancellor of The Jewish Theological Seminary on July 1, 2020, has served JTS both as a groundbreaking scholar and a visionary institutional leader. As dean of two schools and most recently as provost, she has shaped and strengthened JTS’s academic programs while teaching and mentoring countless students. She is the first woman selected as chancellor of JTS in its 134-year history. 

Dr. Schwartz plans to build on what she sees as JTS’s unique strengths as an institution—a place where critical academic inquiry coexists with a deep commitment to Jewish tradition, where Jewish living and Jewish learning happen side by side, and where students develop the skills to discern and share the continued relevance of Jewish texts and the enduring power of Jewish ritual and community.

Numerous Leadership Roles

In over three decades, Dr. Schwartz has held numerous leadership roles at JTS, most recently as provost, a position to which she was appointed in 2018, also as the first woman. From 1993 to 2018, she was dean of the Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies, JTS’s undergraduate dual-degree program with Columbia University and Barnard College. As List College dean, Dr. Schwartz strengthened the program and reimagined it as a place for all students who value serious Jewish learning and intentional Jewish living, not solely for future Jewish professionals. Under her leadership the school focused on developing a cadre of knowledgeable graduates who would work in varied professional fields while serving as committed lay leaders in the Jewish world. In 2010, Dr. Schwartz also became dean of the Gershon Kekst Graduate School, a post she retained while she was provost. In this position, she spearheaded innovations such as a new MA program in Jewish ethics, a joint Jewish ethics MA/MPH with Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health, and a new certificate program in ethics and social justice.

Groundbreaking Scholarship

Dr. Schwartz, who earned her PhD at JTS, became one of the first women on its faculty and was instrumental in the addition of Jewish gender studies to the curriculum. As a scholar of American Jewish history, she brought to light the previously overlooked contributions of women to the development of American Judaism and expanded our understanding of modern American Jewish society and culture. During her career, she has taught courses exploring Jewish identity, the Jewish family, the depiction of Jews in American popular culture, and Jewish gender studies. Her award-winning book, The Rabbi’s Wife, is a penetrating examination of the role of rabbis’ wives in the development of American Jewish life. She is also the author of The Emergence of Jewish Scholarship in America: The Publication of the Jewish Encyclopedia and numerous articles on modern Jewish life, including pioneering research into the founding of the Ramah Camping Movement. Most recently, Dr. Schwartz has co-taught interfaith courses with a colleague at Union Theological Seminary, bringing JTS and Union students together to study women’s transformational religious leadership and the fraught history of Jewish-Christian relations.

As a leading scholar of modern American Judaism, Dr. Schwartz is often sought by the news media to offer insight into Jewish history and current affairs, and has written articles for various media outlets discussing modern Jewish history and the Jewish experience. She lectures frequently to audiences across North America and at JTS public events.  

Dr. Schwartz has served for many years on the academic council of the American Jewish Historical Society and the academic advisory boards of the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute, and the Jewish Women’s Archive.

As a third-generation JTS graduate, the wife of a late JTS-ordained rabbi, and the mother of a son who was ordained at the JTS Rabbinical School and received a master’s degree at The William Davidson School, Dr. Schwartz brings to the role of chancellor an unmatched knowledge and love of an institution to which she has been connected her entire life.

GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND AWARDS

National Jewish Book Award in the category of Modern Jewish Thought, 2006, for The Rabbi’s Wife

PUBLICATIONS 

  • The Rabbi’s Wife: The Rebbetzin in American Jewish Life. New York: New York University Press, 2006. 
  • The Emergence of Jewish Scholarship in America: The Publication of the Jewish Encyclopedia. Cincinnati: Hebrew Union Press, 1991.
  • “They Married What They Wanted to Be? Rebbetzins and their Unconventional Paths to Power,” in Gender and Religious Leadership: Women Rabbis, Pastors, and Ministers, ed. Hartmut Bomhoff, Denise Eger, Kathy Ehrensperger, and Walter Homolka (New York: Lexington Books, 2019).
  • “What Has Made the Jewish American Family Jewish? American? A Family?” in The New Jewish Family, ed. Len Sharzer and Burton Visotzky (New York: Louis Finkelstein Institute and JTS Press, 2018).
  • “From Kremenets to New York: My Personal Journey as a Historian,” in Conversations with Colleagues; On Becoming an American Jewish Historian, ed. Jeffrey S. Gurock (Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2018).
  • “‘No Child’s Play’: Educating Jewish Women Jewishly,” in Sisterhood: A Centennial History of Women of Reform Judaism, ed. Carole B. Balin, Dana Herman, Jonathan D. Sarna, and Gary P. Zola. Cincinnati: Hebrew Union College Press, 2013.
  • “Henrietta Szold: The Making of an Icon,” in New Essays in American Jewish History: Commemorating the Sixtieth Anniversary of the Founding of the American Jewish Archives, ed. Pamela S. Nadell, Jonathan D. Sarna, and Lance J. Sussman, 455–66. Cincinnati: American Jewish Archives, 2010. 
  • “Rebecca Aronson Brickner (1894–1988), Benderly Boy?” in The Women Who Reconstructed American Jewish Education 1910–1965, edited by Carol K. Ingall, 63–74. Waltham: Brandeis University Press, 2010. 
  • “The Three Pillars of Ramah: Then and Now,” in Ramah at 60: Impact and Innovation, 93–104. New York: National Ramah Commission, 2010. 
  • “The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Hebraist: The Life and Dreams of Aron Shimon Shpall,” in “From Rebbetzin to Rabbi: The Journal of Paula Ackerman,” American Jewish Archives 59 (2007): 99–206. 

LECTURES

  • Fake News and the Rise of Antisemitism
  • “Everyone Shall Sit in Safety Under His Own Vine and Fig Tree”? Jews and American Politics
  • American Jewry and Israel—An Ever-Shifting Relationship
  • Goodbye, Columbus, Hello Christopher: The Evolution of American Jewry
  • Merchants, Mah-jongg, and Menorahs: The History of Jews on Long Island
  • We’ve Come a Long Way, Baby: Feminism and American Judaism
  • Beyond Fiddler: How Jews Became Part of Mainstream America
  • Havdalah at the Lake: Jewish Camping and the Cultivation of American Jewish Identity
  • Baskin-Robbins Has 31 Flavors—How About American Judaism? 
  • From Hank Greenberg to Heeb: The Evolution of American Jewish Culture 
  • From Jewess Jeans to Juicy JAPs: Clothing and Jewish Stereotypes
  • From the Pews to the Pew Study: How Our Past Can/Can’t Inform Our Future as American Jews
  • They Married What They Wanted to Be: Rebbetzins in American Jewish Life 

RESEARCH

Dr. Schwartz focuses her research, writing, and teaching on American Jewish life, history, and culture, as well as Jewish gender studies. She is the author of numerous articles on modern Judaism and Jewish life, including groundbreaking research into the founding of the Camp Ramah movement. 

Main Page

The Announcement

Meet Dr. Schwartz

Biography and Scholarship

Message from Dr. Schwartz

Media, Public Lectures, Writing

Testimonials