Dozens of anonymous Jewish parents are collaborating in a subversive act of citizen journalism that’s bringing a burst of transparency to the murky realm of day school tuition.

Over Labor Day weekend, the anonymous collaborators built a massive Google spreadsheet listing tuitions for hundreds of Jewish elementary schools, highs schools and yeshivas in the United States and Israel.

“I don’t think there’s another composite of information like this anywhere,” said Aaron Simkovich, a Chicago-area father whose children attend Arie Crown Hebrew Day School. “It’s part of people’s decisions about where they want to move, but it’s hard to do really good research on that.”

The school fees range from Manhattan’s pluralistic Abraham Joshua Heschel School, which charges $40,900 for first grade, down to a handful of ultra-Orthodox day schools with reported costs of $5,000 and below.

After just a few days, the crowds-sourced collaboration found an audience. On Tuesday morning, more than 70 people were viewing the document at any one time.

Tuition costs range widely among private religious schools, and schools rarely advertise their pricing. While families may decide their financial priorities based on the affordability of day schools, comparative tuition rates can be hard to come by, and comparison-shopping is made difficult by the lack of transparency.

Newton, Massachusetts parent James Wolfe created the spreadsheet on Friday after spending weeks wondering why Maimonides School, the Brookline Jewish day school where he sends his two children, had not yet started its classes.

“I was watching on Facebook all of my friends, they were posting first day of school pictures,” Wolfe said. Puzzled as to why his children seemed to be receiving less education hours despite the hefty fees he pays, he created a public Google spreadsheet comparing the tuition and the number of school days of five Jewish day schools around the country. One of the schools didn’t post its tuition online, so Wolfe called the school Friday and asked a receptionist.

The Jewish day school organization Prizmah, formed this year as a combination of a bevy of other groups, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Some day school parents, meanwhile, spent the long weekend combing the document.

“There isn’t a lot of information out there, and it’s interesting to...read more at Forward