In Memory

Judith Horwitz (Shulman) VIEW PROFILE

Judith Horwitz (Shulman)

Judy (Horwitz) Shulman (1941-2021) died in her home on the Stanford campus on January 14, at the age of 80, in the comforting presence of her family.

Judy was born in Chicago on January 8, 1941 to Joe and Ethel (Levy) Horwitz. She was the middle child between older brother David and younger sister Barbara. The family soon moved to Highland Park, IL where she graduated from Highland Park High School in 1959. She spent her freshman year at the University of Wisconsin immersed in the Integrated Liberal Studies (ILS) program, which she loved. She sacrificed completion of that program and transferred to Northwestern, when she became engaged to Lee Shulman, a graduate student at the University of Chicago. They had met at Camp Ramah in Wisconsin and he subsequently taught her Hebrew at North Suburban Synagogue Beth El, a conservative congregation that her father and mother helped to found. The 18 year old teacher and his 16 year old student fell in love, breaking all the rules. When they married during winter break late in 1960, she was a 19 year old sophomore at Northwestern and he was a 22 year old doctoral student at Chicago.

Judy completed her preparation as an elementary school teacher in 1963, when the couple moved to East Lansing, Michigan where Lee would teach introductory educational psychology for future teachers at Michigan State University and she would teach 4th grade at Wardcliffe Elementary School in Okemos. Her first few months of teaching were exciting, punctuated by the excitement of "the new math" and shocked by living through the Kennedy assassination with her ten-year-old pupils. Babies followed. Allen was born in 1964, and Adina 23 months later. In 1969-70, Judy and Lee spent a sabbatical year in Jerusalem. There she grew closer to Lee's grandfather, Rabbi Jacob Shulman, who died while they were in Israel. In December of that year, she gave birth to Daniel Jacob, who would carry his grandfather's name. Judy never tired of community engagement. In East Lansing, she shared in the creation of a new synagogue, Kehillat Israel, completely lay-led, and served many terms as chair of the synagogue school board.

As the three kids were growing up in the comfortable village of Okemos, Judy was inspired to pursue a calling that would become the driving force of her professional life—addressing the challenges of educating new teachers and sustaining the development of veteran teachers. She earned a master's degree in reading education at Michigan State and collaborated on designing and teaching an exciting program to teach study skills to first-generation students in agriculture. Her first book, with the provocative title "Making It in College," grew out of that course. Her real gift was supporting people learning to teach. During a sabbatical year at Stanford, Judy worked as a research assistant to the psychoanalyst Bruno Bettelheim in his work on children's reading errors. She became an outstanding mentor and coach for aspiring teachers in Michigan State's ambitious Teacher Corps program, serving for several years as a "clinic professor." She also followed her MA in reading with graduate study that focused on educational ethnography and the development of cases. This orientation toward cases and ethnographic inquiry laid the foundation for the rest of her professional life.

When the family arrived in the Bay area in late 1982, Lee was teaching at Stanford and Judy found a part-time position as a research assistant at the Far West Regional Educational Laboratory in San Francisco. Over time, that position grew into a role as a senior research associate and program director. In that position, she created the Institute for Case Development in Education which became a national and international resource. During her 25 years at WestEd (to which the Lab had changed its name), she published many articles and seven teacher casebooks plus her classic Case Methods in Teacher Education which was also translated into Chinese. In 2004, she received the national award for Applying Research into Practice given annually by the American Educational Research Association.

After moving to the Bay Area, Judy served the Jewish community with great energy. She served on the boards of two new Jewish Day Schools, Gideon Hausner and Kehillah. She served on the board of Congregation Kol Emeth. She served on and chaired the committee that selected the outstanding Jewish educators in the Bay Area for the Helen Diller Award. She served on the grants allocation committee of the San Francisco Jewish Federation. She organized and worked at food kitchens and at the Ecumenical Hunger Project. There was no role she loved more than serving as a volunteer Jewish chaplain at Stanford Hospital. As part of the program under the leadership of Bruce Feldstein, Judy did regular rounds visiting patients and also served on the program's board.

Judy particularly enjoyed teaching about the development and use of cases all over the United States and across the world. In Israel and in Norway, in Taiwan, Hong Kong and Shanghai, and from San Francisco to New York, she offered well attended workshops and seminars.

Judy was predeceased by her mother and father, Joe and Ethel Horwitz. She is survived by her husband of 60 years, Lee Shulman, her children Allen (Debby Dresner) Shulman of Northbrook, IL, Adina Shulman of Santa Monica, and Daniel (Lisa Weingarten) Shulman of San Diego, grandchildren Joey, Jordy, Becky, Sam and Sarah, as well as her brother Dr. David Horwitz (Essie Waxler) of Los Angeles and her sister Barbara Hoffman (David) of Highland Park and Boca Raton, as well as many loving nieces and nephews.

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sfgate/obituary.aspx?n=judy-shulman&pid=197569057

 



 
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01/26/21 11:32 AM #1    

Annie Seyfarth (Monroe)

What an amazing,accomplished and,...inspirational  woman! The world is better place because of Judy's life. My thoughts/love to her family.

Annie (Seyfarth)


01/26/21 02:56 PM #2    

Carol Gould (Weiss)

Barbara Horwitz Hoffman, Judy's sister woke me early in the morning from Boca Raton. I knew whsurreal en I saw the caller Id she was about to tell me that Judy had died. We were both crying and comforting one another. I just couldn't imagine that poor Barbara and her brother David could not attend their sister's funeral. I did watch it on ZOOM last Sunday. So surreal for such a warm, sensitive friend

 Judy was one of the 1st friends I made when I came to HP in April of 7th grade. We shared hours together at each other's home that we each felt a part of each others family.

Our relationship flourished as we both were interested in Judiasm, Beth El USY (like a teen club) took classes and lectures and of course spent time together at Edgewood and later HPHS> She had a crush on her Hebrew School teacher who would become her husband when she was just 19. I was a bridesmaid and still cherish the golden charm she gave us with her and Lee's name on it!

Five years later she would walk down the aisle as a bridesmaid for me!! She moved  to Mi., completed her degree and then earned more as they later settled in Palo Alto where Lee was a Professor at Stanford.The secret of a life enduring friendship is to keep it up!! She was much better than I> She had her parents, her sister and her own kids living here so she travelled often to visit.I was lucky because not only did we get a chance to visit  but Steve and I became next door neighbors to Judy's sister and her husband David cementing us more as we became close friends to her sister and our children are still  close today!!

I can see Judy's face shining at her wedding, smiling at my sweet sixteenth bday party and many occasions we shared.She came to visit me at our home the Friday before the /59th reunion. She knew I had a bad car accident requiring emergency surgery and a 2 week stay in the hospital. She was weak, had lost weight and my heart brokebut she answered no questions about herselfONLY about me. That was Judy sensitive, caring, loving, self effacing .She will always be a part of my life. May her memory be for a blessing. I will Miss her and thankful for our wonderful lifelong friendship.  Carol Gould Weiss

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