How College in Prison is Leading Professors to Rethink How They聽Teach
Programs that offer college in prison are becoming more prevalent
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When it comes to education in prison, policy and research often focus on or improves the of those who are serving time.
But as I point out in my new edited volume, 鈥,鈥 education in prison is doing more than changing the lives of those who have been locked up as punishment for crimes 鈥 it is also changing the lives of those doing the teaching.
As director of a and as a and who teaches in both colleges and prisons, I know that the experience of teaching in a correctional facility makes educators question and reexamine much of what we do.
My book collects experiences of college professors who teach in prison. A common thread is that we all went into education behind the wall thinking about ourselves to some extent as experts but have since critically reflected on what we know through interactions with incarcerated students and the institutions that hold them.
Rewriting the book
One semester in 2020, I volunteered to tutor for a class on something that occurs frequently behind prison walls: conflict and negotiation. The class featured two books that are considered essential to the field. The first is 鈥,鈥 a 2014 text that invites readers to reflect on how conflict has played out in their personal lives. The second is 鈥,鈥 a 2011 text described by its publisher as a 鈥渦niversally applicable method for negotiating personal and professional disputes without getting angry 鈥 or getting taken.鈥
鈥淵ou know, I know these are very important books and all, but this isn鈥檛 really what would work in here,鈥 one incarcerated student said after a few class meetings, gesturing to the prison walls. 鈥淗ere, you can鈥檛 talk openly about your feelings like the authors want us to, and the rules of relating to people are different.鈥
I responded that his observation was astute, and that knowing both sets of rules 鈥 and how to switch between them 鈥 could be profoundly useful. For example, I theorized, I imagine he behaves differently during yard time than on a phone call with a family member on the outside. If the textbooks about conflict on the outside didn鈥檛 adequately address how to handle conflict in prison, I suggested he write an equivalent book for conflict negotiation in prison.
鈥淢aybe I should,鈥 he chuckled, and looked around to his classmates. 鈥淢aybe we should.鈥
The experience showed me how even though there are textbooks that are considered 鈥渦niversal,鈥 that universality may not always extend itself to correctional institutions.
A new understanding of status
As a full professor and chair of the sociology department at Clark University, a small, private university in Worcester, Massachusetts, is used to being accorded a certain degree of respect for her professional accomplishments and credentials. But none of those things mattered once she passed through the gates of medium-security prisons for men located in Massachusetts.
鈥淪tatus that I might have as a scholar, full professor, department chair 鈥 is rendered invisible as we enter prison,鈥 Tenenbaum writes. When passing through security, 鈥淚 have been abruptly instructed to obey commands and my questions are ignored.鈥
Encounters with correctional officers are frequently unnerving for educators, particularly at the entrance gates.
鈥淚 find myself in the position of needing to second-guess what I may (or may not) have done wrong and defer to people who are considerably younger than I am,鈥 Tenenbaum continues. 鈥淭here were times that I followed rules only to be scolded when the rules appeared to be differently interpreted from one day to the next. To be in the subordinate role of a power dynamic is a humbling experience. 鈥 It takes having expectations defied to realize that they even existed.鈥
Whether the rules are about clothing faculty members are allowed to wear or the number of pieces of paper we can carry in, the decisions are frequently about power. In her chapter, Tenenbaum writes that having had her status questioned has led to a new sense of humility and altered the power dynamics in her professional world. She does not take it for granted that her expertise is currency for respect.
Modeling apology
When an incarcerated student told Bill Littlefield, a retired English professor, that the novel 鈥淔rankenstein鈥 had no relevance to his experience or life, Littlefield鈥檚 first reaction was to push back.
鈥溾楪ood writing is always relevant,鈥 I said, ever the professor,鈥 writes Littlefield. Littlefield tutors and teaches at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Concord and Northeastern Correctional Center. He is also author of the newly released book 鈥,鈥 as well as popular host of WBUR鈥檚 sports radio show 鈥.鈥
鈥淗e said he would read it, certainly 鈥 even though he knew that the story of the lonely, ultimately vengeful monster created by the gentleman scientist鈥檚 preposterous, insane overreach would have nothing to say to him,鈥 Littlefield writes. 鈥淚 argued that he was wrong.鈥
But in the week that followed, Littlefield said he came to see his own reaction as a mistake and an act of arrogance.
鈥淲hen we met again, I made a point of apologizing to the student, in front of his classmates,鈥 Littlefield writes. 鈥淚 told him that I鈥檇 realized it was no business of mine to tell him what was relevant to his life. If he did the reading, he鈥檇 decide for himself.鈥 The student thanked him.
More college in prison
As college programs in prison , I fully expect that in the coming years there will be more and more college professors being transformed by the powerful experience of teaching behind bars. This is especially so given that Congress has on federal financial aid, namely, Pell Grants, for people who are incarcerated.
In 2022, there are 374 prison education programs run by 420 institutions of higher education operating in 520 facilities, according to the maintained by the Alliance for Higher Education in Prison.
Collectively, college programs in prison have been shown to that a person who participates in them will return to prison after being released. But as I show in my book, the programs are also dramatically changing the perspective of the college professors who teach them.![]()
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