Career
She is also the first woman and the first sabra to head a Conservative rabbinical school, specifically the Schechter Rabbinical Seminary in Jerusalem, where she was dean from 2005 to 2009. Ramon was ordained in 1989 at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New New York Following that, she acted as interim rabbi at Berkeley Hillel and earned a doctorate in religious studies from Stanford University.
She worked as the “circuit” rabbi for Congregation Har-Shalom in Missoula, Montana before returning to Israel in 1994.
Ramon served as dean of the Schechter Rabbinical Seminary in Jerusalem from 2005 to 2009. In 2011 she left the Conservative Movement and the rabbinate due to ideological disputes.
She no longer uses the title "Rabbi" and considers herself a modern Orthodox Jew.Template:Http://www.haaretz.com/jewish/hadassah-at-100-where-no-man-has-gone-before/rabbis-in-waiting.premium-1.469209
Since 2006, Doctor Ramon has been active in the clinical pastoral care movement in Israel. She has been involved in setting up the first clinical pastoral education unit in Israel, participating in the network of spiritual caregivers as the writer of professional standards for training Israeli chaplains.
In 2011 she set up an the only academic program specializing in Jewish spiritual care at the Schechter Institute.Template:Http://marpeh.schechter.ac.il/english/.