Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Aerospace giant Lockheed Martin opens science, tech preschool in Jerusalem

Other Lockheed programs in Israel include the first LEGO Junior League finals, including 200 third- and fourth-graders; a cyber summer camps for middle-school girls; and a national cyber competition for high-schoolers, in partnership with the Israel Defense Forces Cyber Command and the Rashi Foundation.

Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman sits inside the new F-35 stealth aircraft during a ceremony at the manufacturing factory the Lockheed Martin aerospace company in Fort Worth near Dallas on June 23, 2016. Photo by Ariel Hermoni/Ministry of Defense.
Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman sits inside the new F-35 stealth aircraft during a ceremony at the manufacturing factory the Lockheed Martin aerospace company in Fort Worth near Dallas on June 23, 2016. Photo by Ariel Hermoni/Ministry of Defense.

The Jerusalem Municipality has announced that world-renowned U.S. aerospace company and F-35 airplane manufacturer Lockheed Martin is opening a preschool in Jerusalem, focused on science and technology.

The preschool is scheduled to open in the Kiryat Menachem neighborhood starting in September. This is not Lockheed Martin’s first educational program in Israel. It currently runs STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) schools called MadaKids for preschoolers in Beersheva and Kiryat Malachi.

Lockheed President and CEO Marilyn Hewson issued a statement expressing the company’s hope that the new Jerusalem preschool “will further deepen investment in the educational potential of Israeli children,” and praised Israel as a country that “understands better than almost any nation in the world the importance of educating the next generation in science, technology, engineering and math.”

“The future growth of Israel’s economy will require a constant supply of highly trained, highly capable technical talent,” the company’s website stated. “Lockheed Martin is proud of the collaboration with Israel’s Ministry of Education, Ministry of Science and Technology and the Rashi Foundation to promote STEM-related programs.”

The science-based preschools are an inspiration to nations around the world, according to Lockheed Martin Israel CEO Joshua Shani, who said that Korea and Germany have sent delegations to Israel to study the innovative schooling initiative.

Kindergarteners in Lockheed Martin schools are provided with computers, robotics experiments, construction kits and space-related coursework, which is steeped in STEM-related learning.

Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat praised the initiative, calling Jerusalem the “capital of educational innovation.”

Other Lockheed programs in Israel include the first LEGO Junior League finals, including 200 third- and fourth-graders; a cyber summer camps for middle-school girls; and a national cyber competition for high-schoolers, in partnership with the Israel Defense Forces Cyber Command and the Rashi Foundation.

The National Jewish Advocacy Center called the decision about the Surfside election a “major voting rights victory.”
The team said that the person it banned purchased tickets, which were used by people who performed a Nazi salute.
Although AIPAC supports Goldman, a source on the congressman’s campaign told JNS that “it makes no sense to suggest that we’re in the hands of AIPAC.”
“To have that full commitment and engagement, both at the public level, but also in the faith school system, is incredibly powerful,” Heather Mann, a project officer with UNESCO, told JNS.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry called the decision a “major step in holding the Palestinian authority accountable for its long-lasting terror support—financially and legally.”
The program aims to address “antisemitism as both a rhetorical challenge and an ever-shifting but persistent social reality,” Kelly Carr, an associate professor at the university, stated.