Abstraction, belonging and comfort in the prison classroom

Author:

Little Ross1ORCID,Warr Jason2

Affiliation:

1. Division of Community and Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK

2. Criminology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

Abstract

Prison education, at the institutional and policy level, is too often about the use value of qualifications, rather than the exchange value inherent in the experience of learning. This article explores how abstract discussion can be used to resolve this problem by facilitating the production and exchange of pedagogical capital in a prison classroom. The development of pedagogical capital, a form of symbolic capital related to learning, enhanced the sense of belonging and comfort experienced by students. The classroom comprised learners from university and prison, participating in informal discussion emanating from abstract questions. Based on interviews with, and feedback and reflections from, students participating in an eight-week course located in a higher security Category B training prison in the midlands of England (‘HMP Lifer’), we discuss how pedagogical capital was produced and maintained. Firstly, it supported teachers to create a trustworthy learning space to discuss abstracted concepts and challenge each other – at an appropriate construal distance – without the discussion becoming too emotionally charged or exposing potential vulnerabilities. Secondly, it enabled students to use their own historical knowledge and experiences (narratives), creating a more equitable contributory space and reducing the risk of judgement. Thirdly, these elements combined to facilitate an iterative process of dialogical investment and exchange. The findings strongly suggest that the pedagogical approach was crucially important in creating a safe, trustworthy, equitable learning space in which students felt sufficiently at ease to exchange their thoughts and ideas as part of group discussion. We conclude that this pedagogical approach has wider implications for enhancing student resources, and fostering a sense of belonging in other, non-penal contexts, including higher education institutions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science

Reference82 articles.

1. Alexander R (2009) ‘Pedagogy, culture and the power of comparison’. 1.1 In: Daniels H, Lauder, H and Porter J. Educational theories, cultures and learning: A critical perspective, 10.

2. Privatising education, privatising education policy, privatising educational research: network governance and the ‘competition state’

3. Bennallick M (2019) 'The Open Academy: An Exploration of a Prison-Based Learning Culture', PhD, Royal Holloway, University of London.

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1. Language education for migrant/refugee inmates inside two prisons in Greece: a nexus analysis research;Language and Intercultural Communication;2024-08-21

2. Improving the Employability of Incarcerated Students;Advances in Higher Education and Professional Development;2024-02-27

3. Moral sight and ethical praxis in the prison classroom;Criminology & Criminal Justice;2023-09-09

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