The Week That Was: April 29-May 5
In today’s world, no nonprofit organization would think twice about collecting, and hopefully analyzing, information about their donors. So too, with website traffic. For how else can one effectively judge site visitors’ demographics and interests?
Based on site and RSS feed analytics, here – in alphabetical order – are the most popular posts on eJewish Philanthropy last week:
A New-Old Approach to Holocaust Education
by Rabbi Benjamin Berger
It is often noted that Holocaust education is one of the most pressing and vexing educational challenges of our time given the passage of time and waning number of survivors. Nowhere is this challenge more pressing than on the college campus, where reasonably competing interests, programs and pleasures are often a priority for our students.
Picture This: Using Social Media to Engage Jewish Millennials
by Adam Goldberg
Hillel’s mission is to enrich the lives of Jewish undergraduates and graduates so that they may enrich the Jewish people and the world. As Hillel staff we seek to engage Jewish college students by providing a Jewish college experience, we also aim to engage them creatively online as well.
ROI Community Gets Set to Rock and Roll in Jerusalem
The ROI Community of Jewish innovators will gather 150 dynamic young Jews from across the globe for its annual five-day ROI Summit in Jerusalem, including first-timers from Bolivia, Iceland, Peru and Uganda.
Some Hebrew Schools Decide to Go the Free Route
by Tamar Runyan
Start them young, they say, underscoring the value of a solid educational foundation. But in the world of Jewish education, such a firm footing may not come cheap.
Study Released: American Jewish Giving to Israeli Organizations
The Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies (Brandeis University) has released a new report examining an important facet of the American Jewish community’s relationship to Israel, philanthropy.
Click the red tab above for previous weeks most popular posts.