Golda Och Academy is a private Jewish day school in West Orange, New Jersey. It educates Jewish students from pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade at two campuses. Previously known as Solomon Schechter Day School of Essex and Union, the current name was adopted in June 2011. It primarily serves families from Essex and Union counties, while also drawing students from other parts of North and Central Jersey, along with New York.
During the 2021–22 school year, the school enrolled 424 students, along with 11 pre-kindergarten students, and employed 80.8 full-time equivalent classroom teachers, for a student–teacher ratio of 5.2:1. The school's student body was 97.4% (413) White, 0.7% (3) Black, 0.7% (3) Asian, 0.7% (3) Hispanic and 0.5% (2) Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.[1]
On July 1, 2021, Daniel S. Nevins became the 8th Head of School, succeeding Adam Shapiro.[4] On the same date, Eytan Apter began serving as the Upper School Principal, and Carrie Siegel became the Lower School Principal.
History
Solomon Schechter Day School of Essex and Union opened in September 1965 at Congregation Beth Shalom in Union Township, Union County, New Jersey, founded by Rabbi Elvin I. Kose, Horace Bier, and Nat Winter. Its inaugural classes included kindergarten and a first grade with 18 students. A new grade was added each year for the initial cohort, culminating in the graduation of the first high school class of nine students in 1977. This was the first high school associated with the Solomon Schechter Day School Association.[5]
In 1979, the school acquired its first dedicated facility, the former Roosevelt School in Cranford, New Jersey after holding classes in various locations across Union and Essex counties. In 1986, it purchased the Irving Laurie Building in West Orange, New Jersey. In September 1991, the Upper School moved to a newly constructed building on Pleasant Valley Way in West Orange, later named the Eric F. Ross Campus in 1995.
The Lower School underwent a $7 million renovation and expansion beginning in 2012. Additions included new science and technology labs, an outdoor classroom and garden, a synagogue, a playground, a library, and a cafeteria. The project also created dedicated art and music spaces, modernized classrooms with updated wiring, and improved accessibility.[6]
Since 2014, Golda Och Academy has expanded its STEM programming. This has included a new STEM class and the founding of a robotics club called CodeRunners. A STEM facility was completed in September 2015.[7]
The Golda Och Academy Road Runners[3] compete in the Super Essex Conference, following a reorganization of sports leagues in Northern New Jersey by the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA).[9] With 95 students in grades 10-12, the school was classified by the NJSIAA for the 2019–20 school year as Non-Public B for most athletic competition purposes, which included schools with an enrollment of 37 to 366 students in that grade range (equivalent to Group I for public schools).[10]
The school offers soccer, tennis, volleyball, cross-country, swimming, and basketball for both boys and girls at the middle school or varsity level. Baseball, softball, and a lacrosse club are also available.[3]
In 2013, the school's gymnasium was dedicated to gym teacher and coach Sandy Pyonin in recognition of his 40 years of service at the school. Pyonin has trained more than 30 professional basketball players and coached three teams to National Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) championships.[11]
Joshua Weinstein (born 1983, class of 2001), independent filmmaker who directed the A24 film, Menashe (2017), and the feature documentaries, Driver's Wanted (2012) and Flying on One Engine (2008).[20][21]
^Ginsberg, Johanna. "Faster, faster; Golda Och alum at Olympic swimming trials", New Jersey Jewish News, July 13, 2016. Accessed October 27, 2017. "Jessica Antiles of South Orange stood behind the block at the Olympic swimming trials in Omaha, Neb., on June 26, and closed her eyes, visualizing herself doing her best. She repeated her mantra, 'Try 100 percent. The rest is up to God.'... Antiles, 19, a graduate of Golda Och Academy in West Orange and a member of the Maplewood Jewish Center where her father is president, qualified for the Olympic trials two summers ago while swimming with a club team in Israel, for the 400-meter long course individual medley (two laps each of butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle)."
^Rubin, Debra. "Day school and punk rock collide in teen novel", New Jersey Jewish News, December 6, 2010. Accessed October 8, 2018. "In her latest book, So Punk Rock (And Other Ways to Disappoint your Mother), Ostow, a graduate of the Solomon Schechter Day School of Essex and Union in West Orange, outlines the misadventures of four New Jersey suburban day school teens who form a punk rock band and make a splash on the bar mitzva circuit."
^BiographyArchived May 28, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, Ultimate Gabe Saporta. Accessed June 2, 2015. "In 1996 Gabe and his friends Chris Delvecchio and Joshua Scott-Dicker (which he met at the 'Solomon Schechter Day School of Essex and Union' in New Jersey) formed the Band Humble Beginnings."