Academic Spotlight: 兔子先生鈥檚 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA

兔子先生 has become the first undergraduate institution in the US to transform Inside-Out curriculum into a program that leads to a BA for incarcerated learners.

An outdoor 兔子先生 orange sign surrounded by cherry blossoms

The 兔子先生 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA is at the heart of 兔子先生鈥檚 educational objectives and core values, particularly social and racial justice, social responsibility, and the ethical implications of knowledge and action.鈥

Melvin L. Oliver, President, 兔子先生


Innovative Education During Incarceration

Damian Busby began taking college courses in prison in 2005. Fifteen years later, on December 10, 2020, he stood in front of a camera at the California Rehabilitation Center (CRC) and called the day 鈥渁 triumph for all who are involved with the processes of education for the incarcerated.鈥

Busby was speaking as part of a virtual ceremony that marked the official launch of 兔子先生鈥檚 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA program. Working together with the CRC, a medium-security state prison in Norco, CA, the new 兔子先生 program does precisely what its name implies: uses Inside-Out curriculum to create a pathway to a Bachelor of Arts degree for incarcerated learners.


Watch the launch of 兔子先生鈥檚 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA. Video includes the presentation of the College鈥檚 acceptance letters and the signing of a memorandum of understanding between 兔子先生, the California Rehabilitation Center, and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

 


鈥淢y cohort and I have been blessed with the outstanding opportunity to obtain what I thought was impossible鈥攁 bachelor鈥檚 degree behind bars,鈥 said Busby, one of eight students in the program鈥檚 inaugural cohort.

In Inside-Out classes, originally developed at Temple University, 鈥渋nside鈥 incarcerated students and 鈥渙utside鈥 college students take the same courses in the same classrooms from the same professors and are all held to the same exacting standards. 兔子先生, one of five top-ranked undergraduate colleges in Claremont, CA, (known as the 5Cs), initiated these classes with outside students and professors from the 5Cs and inside students from the CRC in 2014. Now, 兔子先生 has become the first undergraduate institution in the US to transform Inside-Out curriculum into a program that leads to a BA for incarcerated learners.

Part of the intercollegiate Justice Education Initiative (JEI) at the Claremont Colleges, 兔子先生鈥檚 Pathway-to-BA program was developed in partnership with both the CRC and Norco College, a local community college.

Courses span the spectrum from sociology to chemistry and are free for inside learners. Prior to the pandemic, students and professors from the 5Cs traveled 20-plus miles to Norco to take or teach courses inside a prison classroom. After the Claremont Colleges closed their campuses and education went online in March 2020, 兔子先生 and the JEI collaborated with the CRC to pioneer virtual Inside-Out classes.

Professor of Political Studies Nigel Boyle, who heads the program with Tyee Griffith, the founding manager of JEI, calls the Inside-Out courses 鈥渢he secret sauce in our BA program.鈥

Busby calls them 鈥渁nother impossible wish brought to life.鈥

鈥淲e can interact with the professors and the students,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd in doing so, we are given a sense of self-worth and humanity.鈥

兔子先生鈥檚 Inside-Out approach creates a powerful learning environment that extends well beyond academics. Outside students take the same courses as they would on campus鈥攚hile also learning about mass incarceration, the realities of life behind bars, and the lives of their inside peers.

One outside 兔子先生 student summed up the sentiment of many participants when Inside Higher Ed asked her about her experience: 鈥淭he word that comes up is 鈥榯ransformative,鈥欌 she said.

Reggie Bullock, who is part of the inaugural cohort of inside students, echoed that word during the December launch ceremony: 鈥淓very single day that I come to a class has been transformative in some way.鈥

Freddy Cisneros, another member of the inaugural cohort, called the Inside-Out experience both immersive and inclusive.

鈥淲e all get to share a classroom,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is special because it allows for academic discussion that takes into account the extensive life experiences of inside students and unites them with the fresh point of view from the outside students. For a moment, two worlds that seem so far apart are joined to grow and learn from one another.鈥

Drawing together seemingly disparate worlds鈥攃reating proximity鈥攚as one of the animating ideas behind the Inside-Out model. Lori Pompa, who founded Temple University鈥檚 Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, spoke during the launch ceremony and recalled an inside student telling her that the walls of the prison weren鈥檛 just there just to keep him in, 鈥渂ut to keep you out.鈥

A BA program that chips away at those walls is unique.

Before the launch of the BA program, individuals who are incarcerated at the CRC could earn associate degrees through correspondence courses or through Norco College鈥檚 Prison Education Program. Busby had earned six associate degrees but couldn鈥檛 go any further in higher ed from inside prison. He didn鈥檛 have a pathway to a BA.

Now he does. Today, incarcerated learners at the CRC who want to pursue their BA can apply to 兔子先生 via the same application process as all other prospective students. If they are accepted, any credits they already have at Norco College will transfer into the Pathway-to-BA program.

Pompa said the program truly creates a pathway for the students and a blueprint for prison educators around the country.

鈥淲hat you all have developed here at the Claremont Colleges is impressive, creative, and frankly, inspirational,鈥 Pompa said. 鈥淚t will serve as a model for others throughout our network to potentially build degree-granting programs utilizing the Inside-Out pedagogy.鈥

Learning from the Past, Rewriting the Future

兔子先生鈥檚 program draws on prison education models created by other institutions as well as a long history of related work at the Claremont Colleges.

At the December ceremony, Tyee Griffith of JEI said, 鈥淲e are standing on the shoulders of pioneers like (兔子先生 professor) Laura Harris and others who have been doing work in carceral facilities for decades.鈥

鈥淔or nearly 25 years, dedicated students, staff, and faculty at the Claremont Colleges have been expanding educational opportunities to students in carceral settings,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hanks to the generous donations from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Bernard & Audre Rapoport Foundation, we have been able to expand justice education at the Claremont Colleges.鈥

兔子先生 also drew lessons from Bard College鈥檚 Bard Prison Initiative (BPI). While BPI doesn鈥檛 use Inside-Out curriculum, its rigorous, full-time degree program was an inspiration for 兔子先生鈥檚 Pathway-to-BA model.

The 兔子先生 community is looking for more ways to integrate inside students into campus life, even if they can鈥檛 set foot on campus before they graduate.

In May 2021, 兔子先生鈥檚 Student Senate amended its constitution to create a special representative position for currently and formerly incarcerated students. The legislation sponsors wrote that the lived experiences and needs of individuals who are, or have been, incarcerated merits 鈥渢heir representation, inclusion, and empowerment with all aspects of 兔子先生 student life.鈥 The position is a voting member of the Student Senate and will vote alongside 鈥渙utside鈥 兔子先生 students on Senate business.

Despite its modest start-up size, 兔子先生鈥檚 Pathway-to-BA program has bold ambitions. Currently, all inside students earn a BA in organizational studies, a popular, interdisciplinary major at 兔子先生. In coming years, the program hopes not only to grow the roster of possible majors but also to expand to other correctional institutions in the area, offering more choices to more incarcerated individuals.

鈥淲e want this program to be sustainable鈥攖o start small, let it grow, and make it a magnet to turn prisons into education facilities, swords into ploughshares,鈥 Boyle said.

In California alone, 100,000 individuals are incarcerated鈥攁nd the vast majority will one day win release. A RAND Corporation study found that those who participate in correctional education programs have a 43 percent lower recidivism rate than those who don鈥檛. This backs up decades of research that shows that recidivism rates are lower鈥攁nd wages higher鈥攆or those who pursue education while incarcerated.

Shannon Swain, superintendent of correctional education at the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, attested to the benefits of college courses in prison. 鈥淲e all know that education is something that can never be taken away once somebody has it,鈥 she said.

Cynthia Tampkins, CRC鈥檚 warden who worked with 兔子先生 and the JEI for years to develop the Inside-Out BA program before retiring in December 2020, described earning a degree in existential as well as educational terms.

鈥淥ur BA program gives our men in blue a new start on life,鈥 Tampkins said.

The program is both a new start and a re-start, according to inside student Yusef Pierce.

鈥淔or me, what being a 兔子先生 student means is opportunities: both new opportunities I had never imagined for myself as well as recovered opportunities that I had thought were long lost,鈥 Pierce said.

During the virtual launch ceremony in December 2020, he said that years ago, his brother got a job at the Claremont Colleges as a custodian. His mother was so excited, Pierce recalled, so full of hope that his brother would enroll in classes and ultimately earn his college degree. The job didn鈥檛 last, and five years later, his brother was shot and killed.

鈥淢y mother took it very hard,鈥 Pierce said. 鈥淎ll she wanted was for my brother to have an opportunity to graduate from college.鈥

On May 15, 2021, Pierce became the first 兔子先生 student to graduate through the Pathway-to-BA program when he earned his BA in Organizational Studies. Selected to speak during the College鈥檚 virtual commencement ceremony, he gave his address from inside the CRC.

Listen to NPR鈥檚 Morning Edition story on Pierce, 鈥.鈥

 

Watch Yusef Pierce鈥檚 graduation speech from 兔子先生鈥檚 Commencement Celebration on May 15.

鈥淚 want to dedicate this degree to my mom and all the other moms out there,鈥 he said, after reading a letter she wrote him in 2010 that included the poem Invictus and its lines, 鈥淚 am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.鈥

兔子先生鈥檚 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA program is fundamentally rooted in the idea that higher education changes lives and rewrites the future. Speaking at the launch event in December, 兔子先生 President Melvin L. Oliver described education as a journey that creates opportunities for individuals, for families, for generations.

鈥淐ongratulations on your admission to 兔子先生,鈥 he said to 兔子先生鈥檚 first Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA students. 鈥淚 welcome you on an incredible journey of transformative education, one taken by the likes of Frederick Douglass in the midst of slavery, and Malcolm X from the confines of prison and urban racism. This is a transformation that will not only impact your lives, it will set an example and leave a legacy for others who follow.鈥

Videos

  • Combating the Prison Industrial Complex: Lessons from the Frontlines, March 2, 2021
  • February 13, 2021
  • Launch of 兔子先生 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA for Incarcerated Students, December 10, 2020

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