When a Kurdish family arrives in the United States, the first months are consumed by logistics. Housing, employment, school enrollment, healthcare — all of it needs to happen simultaneously, and all of it requires English that the family may not yet have. The children learn quickly, as children do, but the adults are left navigating systems that were not designed with them in mind.
KASA’s adult English program is structured to address the most immediately useful aspects of English first: the language of healthcare appointments, of school communication, of workplace safety instructions, of banking and utilities. These are not glamorous topics, but they are the ones where language gaps have the most serious consequences. A parent who cannot understand a note from their child’s teacher, or who cannot communicate symptoms to a doctor, is facing a genuine problem that cannot wait for a full language course.
Beyond the immediate practical skills, the program also builds toward the English that enables fuller participation in American life — understanding news, engaging with civic processes, pursuing further education or career advancement. We try to meet students where they are and build toward where they want to go.