Michael Bresler

AI in Jewish Schools: From Curiosity to Clarity

Most Jewish schools have moved past the question of whether AI matters. Now comes the harder question: what should we actually do with it?

Over the past few weeks, I’ve heard from many school leaders following my last piece.

Heads of School. Principals. Board members.

The message has been consistent:

“We’re thinking about this.”
“We’ve started experimenting.”
“We know this matters.”

And that’s meaningful.

Because not long ago, the conversation wasn’t even happening.

But there’s is now a shift starting to take place.

The question is no longer “Should we be paying attention to AI?”
For most schools, that answer is already yes.

The question now is:

“What are we actually trying to do with it?”

This is where many schools find themselves stuck not because of resistance, but because of possibility.

There are too many entry points.

Teachers are finding their own use cases.
Administrators are testing different tools.
Ideas are coming from everywhere.

On the surface, that looks like progress.

And in many ways, it is.

But without a shared direction, it’s very hard for that progress to compound into something meaningful.

What I’m seeing across schools isn’t a lack of effort.

It’s a lack of decision.

Not a final decision.
Not a perfect plan.

But a decision about where to focus.

Because AI can do many things.

It can save time.
It can improve communication.
It can support differentiated instruction.
It can streamline operations.

But it can’t do all of those things at once, at least not in a thoughtful way.

And when everything is a priority, nothing really moves.

So the next step for schools isn’t more experimentation.

It’s choosing a starting point.

A clear, intentional place to begin.

That might be:

Focusing on reducing administrative burden for teachers
Improving parent communication
Supporting curriculum development
Or streamlining internal processes

There isn’t one right answer.

But there is a meaningful difference between:

“We’re trying things”
and
“We’re focusing here first.”

That shift changes everything.

Because once a school chooses a direction:

It becomes easier to align people
Easier to evaluate tools
Easier to measure impact
And easier to build trust along the way

This is especially important in Jewish education.

Our institutions don’t just adopt change.

They interpret it, through values, through community, through responsibility.

Which means the goal isn’t speed.

It’s alignment.

The schools that will get the most out of this moment won’t be the ones doing the most with AI right now.

They’ll be the ones willing to pause just long enough to ask:

Where can this make a real difference for us?
Where does it connect to our actual challenges?
And where do we want to lead rather than just follow?

Because the opportunity isn’t just to use AI.

It’s to use it on purpose.

And that starts with deciding what matters most.

About the Author
Michael Bresler is an AI and Operational Excellence advisor who works with Jewish day schools, Federations, foundations, nonprofits, and private-sector organizations. He is the founder of Broadheights and previously served as Board Chair of Beth Tfiloh Congregation, where he helped strengthen systems, leadership, and community alignment. Michael’s career spans financial services, health and welfare, publishing, and direct marketing experience that shaped his belief that strong processes and human-centered leadership are the key to impact. Since October 7, he has focused much of his work on helping Jewish organizations integrate responsible AI, reduce burnout, and free staff to do the mission-driven work that matters. He holds a master’s degree in Negotiation and Conflict Management and speaks about the future of technology, leadership, and community resilience within the Jewish world.
Related Topics
Related Posts
Sign in or Register
Please use the following structure: example@domain.com
Or Continue with
By registering you agree to the terms and conditions
Register to continue
Or Continue with
Log in to continue
Sign in or Register
Or Continue with
check your email
Check your email
We sent an email to you at .
It has a link that will sign you in.