Schools
(In the early ages most of the instruction of young children was by the parents. The leisure hours of the Sabbaths and festival
days brought the parents in constant contact with the children. After the captivity schools came more into use, and at the
time of Christ were very abundant. The schools were in connection with the synagogues, which were found in every village of
the city and land. Their idea of the value of schools may be gained from such sayings from the Talmud as “The world is preserved
by the breath of the children in the schools;” “A town in which there are no schools must perish;” “Jerusalem was destroyed
because the education of children was neglected.” Josephus says, “Our principal care is to educate our children.” The Talmud
states that in Bechar there were 400 schools, having each 400 teachers, with 400 children each and that there were 4000 pupils
in the house of Rabban Simeon Ben-Gamaliel. Maimonides thus describes a school: “The teacher sat at the head, and the pupils
surrounded him as the crown the head so that every one could see the teacher and hear his words. The teacher did not sit in
a chair while the pupils sat on the ground but all either sat on chairs or on the ground.” The children read aloud to acquire
fluency. The number of school-hours was limited, and during the heat of the summer was only four hours. The punishment employed
was beating with a strap, never with a rod. The chief studies were their own language and literature the chief school-book
the Holy Scriptures; and there were special efforts to impress lessons of morality and chastity. Besides these they studied
mathematics, astronomy and the natural sciences. Beyond the schools for popular education there were higher schools or colleges
scattered throughout the cities where the Jews abounded.—ED.)