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Bart Graves, Media Relations Administrator
1601 W. Jefferson
Phoenix, Arizona 85007
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542-3133
ADC Inmate GED Numbers
Continue to Soar
Arizona Inmate GED Numbers on the Rise; Crime Decreases
By Sarah Etter, News Reporter
Corrections.com
In 2003, officials at the Arizona Department of Corrections (ADC) noticed that
Arizona prisons were plagued by two problems – overcrowding and inmate idleness.
Working with a tight budget, Department of Corrections Director Dora Schriro
started the Accelerated General Equivalency Diploma Program, which helped
inmates to work towards their diplomas faster from behind bars – but required no
additional funds, no new instructors, or classrooms.
“I saw the overcrowding. I saw the idleness. I looked around and I saw
half-empty classrooms,” Schriro says. “I had two central ideas. First, make the
best of scarce resources. Second, educate the population.”
Schriro says that one of the most important aspects of the revised GED program
is that it stops inmate “idle-time”, which gives each prisoner less time to get
into trouble or cause problems. While drawing up her plans, she also realized
that the education ADC offered to inmates had to do two things: address the
problem of illiteracy among prisoners and encourage all inmates to become
educated.
And the results of her creation are raising numbers; the number of GEDs awarded
to inmates has been doubling every year since the program’s inception. In 2003,
790 inmates graduated from the ADC diploma program; in 2004, 1,439 inmates
graduated; and in July 2005, an estimated 3,125 inmates had graduated with their
degrees – a 295% increase in two years.
For Programs Division Director Steven Ickes, the program is one of the most
necessary components of helping inmates re-enter society.
“A basic education is a prerequisite to a productive life, and helps reduce
relapse, revocation and recidivism rates,” Ickes said in a statement.
Positive Prison Culture is Contagious
Schriro thinks that having a GED gives many prisoners a sense of self-worth and
creates a positive culture within the facilities that begins to take hold. But
the numbers really speak for themselves; the ADC has seen more than a 20%
decrease in prison violence and has also lowered negative reports from parole
officers, who work with GED graduates.
“Experience shows that inmates benefit from this program,” says Schriro. “We can
tell from the numbers that education is crucial within prisons.”
After each inmate has taken the state mandatory literacy test, their performance
guides the type of GED education that they receive in prison.
Any inmate who does not pass the state-mandated literacy test is enrolled in a
classroom study where they have access to what officials call the Three T’s –
teaching, tutoring, and time in class. Inmates who pass the literacy test, but
do not score in the 11th grade range, are given materials to study for the GED
on their own, with some access to tutors. Meanwhile, inmates who perform well on
the test are given study materials and can study for the GED on their own.
Back-To-Basics
Schriro believes there is another reason that the program is so effective.
“This is a back-to-basics program. We aren’t just providing education, we’re
teaching them real-life skills. In the real world, you need a degree to succeed.
We want to give them the tools to succeed,” Schriro said.
Schriro hopes that inmates leave prison with their GEDs and return to society as
accountable, productive citizens. Schriro adds that one of the most important
factors that helped the program was that educators and corrections officers
worked together as a team to identify inmates who needed instructional services.
Schriro says that it really comes down to the notion that life inside the prison
should resemble life outside of the prison.
“It’s the idea that inmates can acquire values, habits, and skills that will
help them become productive, law-abiding citizens,” Schriro says.
The program also teaches offenders to take responsibility for themselves and the
crimes they have committed in the past – preventing them from repeating the same
mistakes. By leaving prison with a diploma, many inmates are better prepared to
enter the workforce and feel they have accomplished something worthwhile during
their incarceration.
A modified prison management style can promote positive inmate behavior and a
goal-oriented population. According to Schriro, many conventional prison systems
use control as the central tool of prison management, but that control
eliminates any chance for prisoners to make choices and be responsible for those
choices.
However, by involving offenders in activities similar to those on the outside,
they must make choices – and therefore, must be responsible for themselves. This
helps to ease the transition between prison life and life on the outside, and
equip each inmate for the real world.
For Schriro, however, the gratification is not just in educating the inmates and
preparing them for the real world – it’s also for the rest of society, where she
hopes inmates will become productive rather than regress into their old patterns
of deviant behavior and crime.
“It’s critical that every able inmate earns a GED certification before he is
released – it’s a prerequisite, a basic credential for finding and keeping a job
in the community,” Schriro says. “Our staff has done a phenomenal job – and we
have achieved remarkable results with these inmates.”
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