He is the former principal of the Jordan L. Mott School in the South Bronx, also known as Junior High School 22. He had success in taking the failing school in a tough neighborhood and turning it around.[8] This drew attention because Waronker, a member of the Chabad-Lubavitch sect of Hasidic Judaism who wears a conservative suit, a beard, a black hat and a velvet yarmulke, had to overcome prejudice both in getting the job and in gaining the trust of the parents, teacher and students at the school.[8] Waronker, a former intelligence officer in the United States Army, took over a school listed as one of the 12 most violent in New York.[9] There were active gangs, attacks and fights that led to hospitalizations, drug use and alcohol on campus.[8][10]
Waronker's methods included expelling and suspending large numbers of students, adding guidance counselors, a psychologist, social workers, and family workers to the staff and finding ways for more teachers to attend advanced educational seminars. Students got one-on-one or small group tutoring one to three times a week. There were frequent field trips and the school had books in every classroom, a new library, new science labs, and laptop computer carts. The school was divided into eight small academies, so that small groups of teachers could focus on small groups of students.[8][10][11]
On March 22, 2011, Waronker was recognized by the New York State Senate for his receipt of the Elementary School Principal of the Year Award from the Association of Orthodox Jewish Teachers with "Resolution J902-2011". 2 October 2015.
In 2019, Waronker assumed leadership of the Yeshiva Beth Rivkah Ladies College in Australia.[13] After travelling to the U.S. from Australia in 2020 for his daughter's wedding, Waronker was forced to leave this position because COVID-19 travel restrictions prevented him from returning to Australia.[14]
Honors and awards
Recipient of the Association of Orthodox Jewish Teachers' Elementary School Principal of the Year Award on March 27, 2011[15]
Personal life
Waronker lives in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York with his six children, Shoshana, Yaakov, Tzvia, Tamar, Leah, and Baruch and his wife Malka.[5][15][16]