By Ashley A. Smith – EdSource
Achieving a college degree in prison is rare, but now a select 33 incarcerated people in California can earn their master’s degrees.
California State University, Dominguez Hills, and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation announced a partnership Thursday to launch the state’s first master’s degree program for incarcerated people. Corrections Secretary Jeff Macomber said the partnership furthers the state’s prison system’s goal to expand “grade school to grad school” opportunities.
“These efforts are vital, as education serves as a powerful rehabilitative tool,” Macomber said.
Research shows that prison programs reduce recidivism rates and help formerly incarcerated people find jobs and improve their families’ lives once they are released. Those studies show that incarcerated people are 48 percent less likely to return to prison within three years than those who didn’t attend a college program in prison.
All 33 of the state’s adult prisons offer the ability for the system’s 95,600 incarcerated people to earn community college degrees; about 13.5 percent are enrolled in a college course. The state has been expanding its offerings of college in prisons.
Eight partnerships with state universities have begun since 2016 to offer bachelor’s degrees to incarcerated people. About 230 are enrolled in a bachelor’s degree program for the current semester.
The new Dominguez Hills program will allow all people in all 33 prisons who have already earned a bachelor’s degree and have at least a 2.5 GPA, to earn a Master of Arts in humanities.
The students will participate in two years of courses, including urban development, religion, morality and spirituality. The classes will take place over Zoom or through written correspondence.
Tuition for the program is about $10,500 and students or their families will be responsible for covering the costs. However, the corrections department said that it may provide some assistance. The university is also accepting donations to go toward incarcerated students’ tuition. Because these are post-bachelor’s degree courses, the incarcerated students do not qualify for the state’s Cal Grant or federal Pell Grant programs.
“Our mission is firmly anchored in social justice,” said Thomas Parham, president of Cal State Dominguez Hills. “This historic partnership between California State University and CDCR benefits students — and ultimately their families and communities — by distinguishing between what people did and who they are at the core of their being, and recognizing their potential, cultivating their talents and preparing them to thrive in their paths moving forward.”
Parham said it was important for the university to provide advanced learning opportunities in prisons because the campus is focused on “transforming lives.”
The 33 students in the new master’s program reside in 11 different state prisons across the state including Avenal, Chuckawalla Valley and San Quentin state prisons and Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility.
I got it, can’t get a job to pay your tuition go do crime and get caught and the great state of California will pay for it. Or should I say the taxpayers. You just can’t make this sh£¥t up.
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Climate change!!!
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Are there any incarcerated anymore? Newscum is transforming San Quentin into a happy camp… DA’s put in a revolving door at the jail & prison gates… who’s left to get a Masters?
..oh …and some of us can’t afford to put their kid through college as far as getting a Masters, but we’re paying for the jailed to get one? …. you know who in action 🙁
It says tuition is $10.5 k, paid by the inmate, not the state. So why not?
This is simply Big Education trying to broaden its customers base. A degree doesn’t have the same value it once did and a bunch of felons with philosophy degrees is not going to make the institutions of Higher Learning more credible.
If such degrees become worthless maybe more people will see the value in trade schools.
Yoyo
It also says that the state may provide some assistance … so yes, we taxpayer are paying for more criminals.
and more … where can I get a Masters education for under 11 grand? Most Master’s programs will run 50 grand at a minimum … So the criminal gets a masters for 20% of what a law abiding citizen can get it for; makes you wonder sometimes if following the law is really worth it. Used to be ‘do the crime, do the time.’ Now-a-days, ‘do the crime, and will be get a your a college degree while you put in minimal work, while you go to the gym daily, get three square meals a day, guaranteed medical/dental, …. hmmm, where is the incentive to not do the crime?
Forget all the bells and whistles. Just complete the sentence as if you are in a real 3rd world jail. Minimum money spent on prisoners. They are prisoners not on a sabbatical.
Money saved opens more prisons, and our society is full of criminals.
Don’t feel safe? Then keep on doing what doesn’t work.
Isolate prisoners from society and serve full lengthy sentences. They do not know how to participate in a structured free society.
Must be the same program the democrat politicians go through.
Times have changed. It used to be that prisoners graduated from the school of hard rocks.
Another of the countless examples of who the progressive California democrat liberal government truly cares about.
We’re already paying for incarcerated individuals to earn associates and bachelors degrees, now this program is being expanded to masters degrees, and I imagine further expansion to include doctorates can’t be far off.
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I’m not exactly happy that we’re paying for these programs for incarcerated individuals, but as long as we are, then earning a high school diploma, trade certificate, and/or college degree should be a requirement as part of every prison sentence, if the incarcerated individuals will be eligible for parole in the future.
They’re taking this free college thing way too far.
However, what else are you gonna do in prison? May as well churn out smarter ex-cons. Not that they’ll be able to find a job with the Master’s since most employers currently frown on ex-cons. But I’m sure there’s an intrepid employer out there looking for out of the box thinkers. And you can’t get much more out of the box than fresh out the can.
Shoot a gun, go to Yale!
Taxpayer funding for prisoners to get a masters in bating?