A Practical Learning Plan
A concrete weekly plan that takes an adult New Jew from zero to siddur fluency in a year.
Summary. A sustainable Hebrew-learning plan for an adult New Jew is: 20 minutes a day, 6 days a week, for a year. Week 1–4: master the aleph-bet, print and cursive. Week 5–12: master nikkud and reading simple words. Months 3–6: read familiar prayers slowly, building speed; learn 5 new vocabulary words a day. Months 6–12: read the weekly parshah in Hebrew alongside translation; learn Mishnaic Hebrew through Pirkei Avot; begin to attempt unvocalized text. The plan is modest and effective; it has been the path of thousands of New Jews.
Materials
A primer: Shalom Uvrachah or Learn to Read Hebrew in 6 Weeks.
A vocalized siddur: the Koren Sacks Siddur is recommended.
A vocalized Chumash: the Koren Shalem Chumash with Rashi and Onkelos, or the Steinsaltz Chumash.
Flashcards: physical (Old Testament Hebrew Vocabulary Cards, the user has these among their purchases) or digital (Anki with a good Biblical Hebrew deck).
An aleph-bet poster on the wall for daily review.
Audio: recordings of prayer (Aleppo Codex Project, Mechon Mamre) and of parshah leyning (PocketTorah).
Months 1–2: The Alphabet and Nikkud
Twenty minutes a day. Memorize 3–4 letters at a time, using the primer’s sequenced lessons. Practice writing the letters in print, then in cursive. Use flashcards to drill recognition speed. By the end of month two, you should be able to slowly sound out simple Hebrew words with nikkud.
Months 3–4: First Prayers
Open the siddur to the Shema. Read it aloud, slowly. Read it again. Read it a third time. Continue with the Modeh Ani, the Birkot HaShachar, the Amidah’s opening berachot. The prayers repeat across services; familiarity builds quickly. By the end of month four, you should be able to follow along with the congregation through the central prayers of Shacharit.
Months 5–6: Building Vocabulary
Add 5 new words a day, drawn from the siddur and the weekly parshah. Use a vocabulary notebook or Anki. Focus on the most frequent words first (the top 500 Biblical Hebrew words cover about 80% of the Tanakh). The user’s V’Ahavta word-by-word study (included in this Field Guide as Hebrew_Glossary.xlsx) is a model for this kind of work — take a passage you love and work through every word.
Months 7–12: Reading Torah
Open the Chumash to the weekly parshah every Shabbat. Read a verse or two in Hebrew, then check against the English. Build slowly. Read along during the Torah reading at shul. Begin to attempt short passages without nikkud (start with Pirkei Avot, which has a simpler grammar). By the end of a year, you will be a competent siddur reader, a Chumash reader with translation, and a slowly improving reader of the Mishnaic and Biblical Hebrew that the rest of Jewish literature is built upon.
Beyond the First Year
For the second year and beyond: begin systematic study of Biblical Hebrew grammar (Page Kelley’s textbook is the standard); join a chevruta or shiur reading Mishnah or Talmud; start learning Aramaic for Talmudic study; consider a year of intensive Hebrew immersion (Pardes Institute, Hadar, or a Hebrew Ulpan in Israel). The Jewish learning of a lifetime opens up.
Sources
Pedagogy based on standard Hebrew-as-second-language methodology.
Adapted from the Pardes Institute Beit Midrash program (Jerusalem).
The user’s own purchase patterns (siddurim, primers, flashcards, Chumashim).
Further Reading
See the Books chapter for the full Hebrew-learning bibliography.