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Funding For College (Part 2)

BY JAMES R. SMITH

If a person has access to the Internet or has a friend or family member that is willing to help, I have included Web Sites for the purpose of researching Scholarships , in order to help those seeking additional funding in order to take college courses or to further their college education.

Seeking Grants and Scholarships takes patience and time so do not despair if one or more places deny your request or application. Keep at it and remember, ‘Hard Work Pays Off.’ Additionally, many grants and scholarships have filing deadlines so one must be diligent in researching and meeting any and all deadlines requested by the school, organization or foundation.

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Funding For College (Part 1)

BY: JAMES R. SMITH

I have been incarcerated for twelve years now and education has and always been my strongest ambition. As a former innate paralegal, I decided to expand my mind by gaining a college education, but the problem was: How was I going to pay for it? That’s the question most individuals who are incarcerated ask themselves, especially if they don’t have family members or friends to help them. Don’t despair, there are ways.

I was fortunate. A good friend of mine was willing to pay for my initial education. As a result of his kindness, I was able to obtain an Associate’s of Science Degree in Paralegal Studies.

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Keeping Track of Everyone And Everything

One of my biggest successes has been in my ability to organize and develop good classroom management. I believe we all have it in us, to an extent, but some are better than others. I think it is a learned skill.  I also believe if you are organized, you can afford to be more flexible.

That seems like somewhat of a backward thought.  It would seem the more organized a person is, the more rigid he or she would be.  But the more you have everything in order, and the more you know where everything is, the more flexible you can be when something you have to deal with pops up out of the blue. I find myself less stressed and more able to be flexible, when there is a system in place.

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There's No Rehabilitation Without Education (Part 1)

by Dortell Williams

As a nation weve come to value education, even harping on it with popular refrains such as, “education is the path to success, ” and “knowledge is power. ” Our confidence in education is so potent that we dare to vaunt it as one of the few real panaceas to America’s persistent plague of otherwise indomitable poverty.

Yet in the oddest of paradoxes we flatly deny education to those among us who need it most — prisoners. Indeed, it’s no secret that the vast majority of prisoners are undereducated, if not completely illiterate.

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Criminal Justice Caucus – Removing the Bars – Take Action

On March 23rd and 24th, 2012, the Criminal Justice Caucus will be holding a conference entitled “Removing the Bars-Take Action.” This event is an interdisciplinary community event held at Columbia University School of Social Work and in collaboration with students from various law schools, teachers, colleges, social workers, and other criminal justice social workers. Included

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Priority Questions: Religion, Education, and the Prisoner (Part 2)

by Robert T. Elton

In understanding the role of education in one’s life (and the responsibility to seek it) some of us educators have not found that the practicing of any religious faith decreases test scores or detrimentally affects cognitive development. In fact, those religiously inclined show a tendency to high-school equivalency—and post-secondary studies. This is an interesting fact, as it speaks to the psychological and emotional needs of these prisoners.

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Priority Questions: Religion, Education, and the Prisoner (Part 1)

by Robert T. Elton

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…” U.S. Const. Amend. 1 (1787).

As much discord as religious ideas produce, the doctrine of free exercise actually does great service to most all belief structures—considering its birth and adoption in history (this 1st Amendment works today, even in prisons). In the correctional setting, religion dominates the lives of many prisoners, if only because practicing religious beliefs remains one of few rights prisoners have once inside; education is another right (a statutory one).

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Women's Prison Book Project

Women prisoners face special challenges while incarcerated. Eighty percent of women prisoners are doing time for non-violent crimes such as shoplifting, prostitution, drug-related convictions, and fraud. Many women prisoners convicted of violent crimes were defending themselves or their children from domestic violent abuse. Nearly two-thirds of women in prison have at least one child under

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My Big Blunder

I’m going to go out on a limb and tell you about a day when I did tease a student inappropriately.  Mr. Cunningham* was barely twenty years old, and had only been in my class for about three weeks, so I didn’t know him very well.  Class had only been in session for a few minutes one morning, when he referred to me as “Ms. Loaner.”  I didn’t respond until about the third time he said this because I didn’t even realize he was talking to me. In big black letters, “LOANER” is written in several places on each book. It eventually dawned on me and the others that Mr. Cunningham thought my name was “Ms. Loaner”!  I have to say we all laughed, and I TRULY thought the man was playing a joke on me.
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The Color Red (Part 2)

Gangs do what they do because it gives them a sense of power, along with a sense of belonging.  Carrying a gun makes them feel powerful, cool and tough.  In addition, they have back-up.  Their homies protect them.  If anyone messes with them or disrespects them, the group will come to their defense.  They’re not alone.  They ‘belong’ to something bigger – strength in numbers.  And besides, who wants to work as an $8 per hour wage slave when you can make thousands of dollars a week selling drugs?

In short, gangs do what they do because they like it.

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