AMIT Launches "Ellen's Kids" Program in Israel Following $6 Million Gift
NEW YORK, Oct. 30, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Following the passing of AMIT Board Member Ellen Koplow, the Koplow family recently announced a charitable gift of $6 million to AMIT- the largest single gift in the organization's 90-year history. AMIT President Debbie Isaac announced that the endowment will be utilized to dedicate a landmark program known as "Ellen's Kids," in Mrs. Koplow's memory.
According to Isaac, "Ellen's Kids will help AMIT students in Israel who have struggled academically, so they can excel despite their incredible personal challenges and obtain their bagrut (matriculation) certificate."
Many students attend AMIT's schools and surrogate foster care programs due to financial and/or emotional challenges impacting families in Israel. The combination of a highly polarized socioeconomic structure, waves of newly arriving immigrants, and the Israeli-Arab conflict have resulted in many families struggling to make ends meet. Also, some students have been placed in AMIT's foster care programs due to challenging family environments that include alcoholism, illicit drug use, and domestic abuse. One of the paths out of these difficult circumstances is obtaining the bagrut.
Each year, slightly more than half of Israeli high school students are eligible to receive the bagrut which is required for acceptance into Israeli colleges and vocational schools. Obtaining the bagrut has a strong correlation with obtaining higher paying jobs and enjoying greater levels of professional success in Israel.
Eighty-three percent of students enrolled in AMIT's network of high schools throughout Israel consistently receive their bagrut certificate. With an over twenty percent higher bagrut pass rate than the national average, AMIT has already proven the success of its educational model. The Ellen's Kids program will take AMIT's success to the next level.
"Ellen's Kids has the potential to completely transform the future of Israeli society," stated Isaac. With more Israeli teens obtaining bagrut, more Israeli adults will have the potential to obtain higher paying jobs and the national poverty rate will decrease. "That would be the fulfillment of Ellen Koplow's dream - to care for and empower Israeli children of today so they can be successful tomorrow," stated AMIT Executive Vice President Andrew Goldsmith.
About AMIT:
AMIT enables Israel's youth to realize their potential and strengthens Israeli society by educating and nurturing children from diverse backgrounds within a framework of academic excellence, Jewish values and Zionist ideals. Founded in 1925, AMIT operates 110 schools, youth villages, surrogate family residences and other programs that currently serve over 30,000 children. Two thirds of AMIT students come from peripheral cities or traditionally disadvantaged areas in Israel. AMIT constitutes Israel's only government-recognized network of religious Jewish education incorporating academic and technological studies. AMIT is a registered 501(c)(3) organization and a 4-star rated charity according to independent evaluator Charity Navigator and a Gold Member of Guide Star. For more information about AMIT, visit www.amitchildren.org.
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SOURCE AMIT
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