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Press Coverage · September 2017

First Chaldean/Assyrian Charter School in the U.S.

KEYS Grace Academy in Madison Heights — founded by the Kalasho family in 2015 — is the first and only Chaldean/Assyrian centered charter school in the United States. KEYS Food Service was born here.

Originally featured by Weam Namou for Arab America · September 13, 2017

Arab America's national feature, written by Ambassador Blogger Weam Namou, profiled KEYS Grace Academy as a school built to preserve Mesopotamian languages and history through education — and as the community-rooted education model that gave rise to KEYS Food Service.

The school

KEYS Grace Academy was co-founded in 2015 by Nathan Kalasho along with his father Asaad, mother Neran, sister Nadine, and brother Dylan. It is located in Madison Heights, Michigan, and serves students of Middle Eastern backgrounds with families originating in 14 different countries and more than 20 communities across Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

The school provides free busing and food to all children, plus on-site legal aid and a medical clinic for parents inside the building. It opened with 250 students; that number doubled within a year.

Languages & curriculum

While children learn English, the curriculum includes mandatory teaching of Sureth (Syriac) and the second language of Spanish — preserving heritage while building the toolkit for a 21st-century, multilingual future. The school's stated mission is to prepare students to think and succeed in a diverse, technological, and ever-changing world through partnership between home, school, and community.

The garden

One of the school's defining features is its student garden. Each year, students plant and harvest approximately three tons of crops — peppers, zucchini, broccoli, carrots, squash, onions, beets, and watermelon among them — and distribute them to the surrounding neighborhood through a recommendation sheet on the school's Facebook page. Different grades plant different crops depending on the level of care each requires. An on-site greenhouse is tended primarily by 8th-grade students through the school's "Garden Buddy" program.

"We're a school for all. This garden is a mirror to that. The students plant the garden and harvest approximately three tons of crops which they then distribute to the neighborhood."
— Dylan Kalasho, project developer

The library & the school environment

The library was designed by Dylan Kalasho to feel outgoing and trendy — a place where children would want to stay for hours. Every item on the shelves carries a story; the goal is to spark curiosity and keep students asking questions. The school is a green school: a healthy food program runs throughout, much of the artwork is built from recycled material, and drinking fountains provide filtered water so students can refill personal water bottles. Repurposed kindergarten bookshelves now grow eggplants and cucumbers in the garden.

Why it matters to KEYS Food Service

KEYS Grace Academy is where KEYS Food Service began. The same commitment that drives the school — community-rooted, healthy, inclusive, and operationally serious — is the foundation of how KEYS now feeds students across Michigan.


Read the full feature by Weam Namou on Arab America: arabamerica.com/first-chaldean-charter-school-u-s-promotes-language-history.

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