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Effects of Prison Education

By Martin Maximino Image courtesy weslyan.edu

The United States has the largest prison population in the world, with more than 2.2 million inmates in federal, state and local facilities. Although the number of life sentences has quadrupled since 1984, every year approximately 700,000 citizens leave federal and state prisons in the United States to begin a new life. Moreover, the number of releases from U.S. prisons in 2012 exceeded that of admissions for the fourth consecutive year, contributing to a slight decline in the total U.S. prison population.

The professional and personal lives of these individuals after they leave prison show great variety, across different states and income levels. Many ex-offenders struggle to reintegrate into their communities and face significant challenges in re-entering the job market. In this context, recidivism often ensues: The Pew Center on the States suggests that perhaps half of all inmates released will return within three years. But the story of their life challenges typically begins even before conviction and prison time.

A 2014 U.S. National Research Council report authored by some of the nation’s reading criminal justice scholars notes: Many people enter prison with educational deficits and could benefit from education while incarcerated. Literacy rates among prisoners generally are low, and substantially lower than in the general population. Over the past 40 years, the percentage of prisoners having completed high school at the time of their incarceration fluctuated between

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College for Convicts in New Jersey

BY SYDNEY GAYDA / NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM  https://www.federalcriminaldefenseattorney.com/prison-education/Image courtesy forbes.com

 The New Jersey Scholarship and Transformative Education in Prisons Consortium (NJ-STEP) is revolutionizing how inmates will integrate back into society after their release.  College-level classes, now offered to prisoners during their incarceration, are expected to offer “an invaluable boost to incarcerated students, help reduce the rates of recidivism and, cut public spending,” according to NJ.com.

“First launched in 2012, the program is being expanded through a $4 million in grants Rutgers received from The Fort Foundation and The Sunshine Lady Foundation.”  The program has now expanded to seven correctional facilities across the state.  At the Albert C. Wagner Correctional Facility in Bordentown, NJ, a select group of young inmates are taking classes in mostly every subject- from medieval history to sculpture.  Once released, inmates are  able to redeem their credits at “Mercer County Community College, Rutgers University and several other state institutions.”

Bridget Clerkin, for The Times, reported earlier this week that results of the program have been “positively extraordinary”.  Recent research done by the Rand Corporation indicates that “inmates who participate in correctional education programs are 43 percent less likely to go back to prison. And employment after release is 13 percent higher among prisoners who participated in either academic or vocational education programs.”

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To Scrap or Not To Scrap: Inmate Education Programs

By Matthew Mangino / Macon Chronicle-Herald In February, New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announced a new statewide initiative to give prison inmates the opportunity to earn a college degree through funding college classes in prisons across the state. In a press release, the governor’s office revealed that New York currently spends $60,000 per year

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Teaching in Prison

By Secret Teacher / TheGuardian.com  Image courtesy pace.princeton.edu-

No bell marks the start of our day. Instead, a slow drip-feed of men in grey tracksuits amble their way into classes. Sometimes 10 sit in front of me, aged 21 up to 60 or 70. They are the disaffected and the despicable. They are the proud, the defensive and the downright disagreeable; funnelled into education during their first days inside, where they complete assessments in literacy and numeracy. Their scores determine their placement into a classroom, and their subsequent opportunities for work.

I didn’t know you could teach in prison until I volunteered at a rehab centre and someone there had learned to read in jail. It was a revelation to me after I’d always sworn that I would never teach, prompted in part by my primary teacher mother: never me, never a teacher. But something clicked and I knew that this was where I would end up. This was my niche; my place to make a difference.

The most challenging part of working with offenders is the disparity between students in the classroom – the range of ages, their level of literacy and their attitude to learning. Often their only common ground is their criminality. Some learners arrive spoiling for a fight, desperate to avoid the torture of school all over again, determined to prove themselves. Behaviour is an issue, with many refusing to work. Challenging inappropriate language is a constant battle when, for some, the f-word is used in every sentence.

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Will.i.am Opines on the Prison Industrial Complex

By Annie-Rose Strasser / ThinkProgress.org  https://www.federalcriminaldefenseattorney.com/prison-education/Image courtesy Screenshot / NBC

Celebrities served as more than just pretty faces at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner this weekend. While they were in town, several big names, from basketball stars to musicians, also stopped by the week’s Sunday news talk shows to get in a word about policy.

Among them was Black Eyed Peas frontman Will.i.am, who came on Meet The Press to talk about his education foundation. While there, the musician managed to weave together his interest in education policy with a powerful rebuke of America’s inactive Congress, and its problems with mass incarceration.

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No Prison Education in New York

Last week, Governor Andrew Cuomo (New York) canceled his innovative plan to offer basic college education programs to state prisoners.  The cancellation was the result of vociferous opposition from other New York State lawmakers.  Once again, politics trumped common sense. It’s been proven that prison education effectively rehabilitates convicts.  This results in reduced recidivism and

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5 Years Later Officers Still Not Charged in Mass. Prisoner’s Death

In May 2009, Joshua Messier was killed at the Bridgewater State Hospital following an altercation with prison guards. Mr. Messier was severely mentally ill and was being housed at the state hospital to manage his mental health issues better. While seven prison guards were involved in the altercation in Messier’s cell, which led to his

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Prison Law Blog Founder Interviewed by AND Magazine

By Randy Radic On March 9, 2014, AND Magazine ran an interview with PrisonLawBlog.com founder Christopher Zoukis concerning his latest ebook project, the Directory of Federal Prisons.  In the interview, Mr. Zoukis discusses the inspiration for the project, the need he hopes it will fulfill, and how it can help families and friends of federal

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Prisoner Locator Service Launches at PrisonEducation.com

Our good friends at Prison Education News have recently launched a new service that many {Prison Law Blog} readers might find of interest.  This is their Inmate Locator Service, which helps connect those outside of prison to those on the inside by providing links to every state’s prison system’s inmate locator tool, and the prisoner

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H.B. 2486 Clears Washington’s House Higher Education Committee

By Christopher Zoukis

The State of Washington is planning to change how it has delivered education to its incarcerated; the state now plans to allow the Department of Corrections to spend money on college-level education in its prisons.

College education for prison inmates has always been a hard sell to the American public.  Back in the tough-on-crime 1980s and 1990s, with crime rates and victimization soaring, the American people had enough.  They — and, in particular, their representatives in D.C. and their state capitols — engaged in a campaign to cut any perceived amenities for prison inmates and to lock up as many wrongdoers as possible and throw away the key.  It felt good to crime victims to see these wrongdoers punished and it felt like social progress to the lawmakers who enacted the supporting legislation.  Image courtesy www.wesleyan.edu

Fast forward twenty to thirty years and the situation has changed drastically.  Crime rates are down; in some cases, at historically low levels.  The murder rate in Washington State alone is at levels akin to those of the 1970s.  Regardless of this, the United States now incarcerates over 2 million prison inmates, and has several million more on probation, parole, or under other forms of community correctional control.  While the U.S. holds around 5 percent of the world’s population, it incarcerates around 25 percent of the world’s prisoners.  Something is clearly wrong with our crime control policies.

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