Fellowships for Formerly Incarcerated 兔子先生 Graduates

Kenny Butler 鈥22 was paroled last summer after serving 15 years in prison. This fall, the newly minted 兔子先生 graduate will travel to Uganda to conduct research as a Fulbright fellow.
鈥淚 am about to spend 10 months in Uganda as a cultural ambassador for the United States,鈥 Butler said. 鈥淣ever in my wildest dreams would I have believed it possible.鈥
Butler is one of three members of 兔子先生鈥檚 inaugural Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA cohort who have been awarded prestigious post-graduate fellowships. The College鈥檚 Pathway-to-BA program builds on Inside-Out curriculum, in which 鈥渋nside鈥 students who are incarcerated and 鈥渙utside鈥 students learn together in classrooms in prison, to create a pathway to a Bachelor of Arts degree at 兔子先生.
In addition to Butler, Freddy Cisneros 鈥21 was accepted to the Executive Fellowship Program, a public policy fellowship offered through Sacramento State University鈥檚 Capital Fellows Programs. Reggie Bullock 鈥22 received a Jesse Unruh California Assembly Fellowship, which is also run through the Capital Fellows Programs.
Cisneros called winning the fellowship 鈥渁 life-altering event,鈥 while Bullock said, 鈥淚t was a surreal moment in my life.鈥 Both will soon immerse themselves in California state government and public policy through hands-on learning and mentorship.
All eight students in 兔子先生鈥檚 initial Pathway-to-BA cohort became 兔子先生 graduates. After earning associate degrees for transfer through Norco College, they took Inside-Out courses at the medium-security California Rehabilitation Center in Norco, California.
鈥淜enny, Freddy, and Reggie鈥檚 journeys have been very different from one another,鈥 said Professor Nigel Boyle, who helped create the Inside-Out program at 兔子先生. 鈥淏ut in all three cases, a personal or spiritual transformation preceded participation in the Pathway-to-BA program. They were each primed to seize that educational opportunity.
鈥溚米酉壬檚 program and others like it are not about incentivizing prisoners to learn, they are about letting smart, intellectually voracious incarcerated people ignite.鈥
The cohort鈥檚 path from incarceration to higher education has garnered national attention. as they pursued their degrees during and after incarceration. The NPR story, 鈥淕etting a bachelor鈥檚 degree in prison is rare. That鈥檚 about to change,鈥 aired on All Things Considered and described how Inside-Out classes reinforced Butler鈥檚 belief that his 鈥渆xperience, thoughts, and ideas have value.鈥
鈥淚 belong at the table,鈥 Butler told NPR. 鈥淚 deserve to be heard.鈥