The Well-Being Impacts Associated with College in Prison: A Comparison of Incarcerated and Non-Incarcerated Students Who Identify as Women

Author:

Moore Sarah Y.1,Erzen Tanya1

Affiliation:

1. University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, USA

Abstract

Benefits of college in prison (CIP) programs often center on reduced recidivism and other post-release adjustment outcomes. This article argues for broader recognition of positive outcomes to include well-being, coping, and academic engagement for incarcerated students, noting the specific challenges for female-identifying inmates with backgrounds that often include high levels of abuse and violence. Using longitudinal data from female-identifying students in a CIP program and comparison data from a matched non-incarcerated sample, improvements in these outcome measures are demonstrated as incarcerated students remain in the program. Importantly, their measures of well-being, coping, and academic engagement were significantly better than the matched non-incarcerated sample for most measures. Further, the possible underlying mechanism for the findings is discussed, linking them to program characteristics that emphasize the development of community, agency, and personalized—in-person education—qualities that are in alignment with trauma-informed practices.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference34 articles.

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5. Compassion Prison project.org (2021, March 14). Childhood trauma statistics. Compassion Prison Project. Retrieved January 2, 2022, from https://compassionprisonproject.org/childhood-trauma-statistics/

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