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Teaching College Inside Prison Walls: Stories from Community College Educators Susanna B. Spaulding Colorado Mountain College Clifford P. Harbour, James.

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Presentation on theme: "Teaching College Inside Prison Walls: Stories from Community College Educators Susanna B. Spaulding Colorado Mountain College Clifford P. Harbour, James."— Presentation transcript:

1 Teaching College Inside Prison Walls: Stories from Community College Educators Susanna B. Spaulding Colorado Mountain College Clifford P. Harbour, James Banning, and Timothy Gray Davies Colorado State University

2 Phenomenon of Interest How community college educators who teach college in prison make meaning of their experiences

3 Conceptual Framework Tension between two contrasting conceptualizations of education: education as a means of social control (Bourdieu, 1967) and education as the practice of freedom (Freire, 1970/2003)

4 Education As a means of social control when the power of the state, especially as exercised through the school system, molds the beliefs and values of its subjects

5 Education As the practice of freedom so that the dialogue between the teacher and the student generates opportunities for critical thinking and problem solving

6 Prison as a Discursive Environment The prison’s hierarchical power structure that focuses on social control contrasts with the democratic classroom that community college educators attempt to create.

7 Research Questions  How do educators who teach college in prison understand their work as teachers of higher learning skills?  How do these experiences illuminate the influence of the educators’ character and motivation and mediate the prison environment in the teaching and learning process?

8 Research Method Narrative inquiry based on data in the form of in-depth stories collected from four participants through unstructured interviews

9 Transcription as Analysis Analysis began by isolating large segments of transcribed data that appeared to be “narratives” from other forms of discourse, such as arguments and questions and answer exchanges

10 Three Narrative Structures  Core narratives that illustrated temporal ordering of the action  Poetic structures that were organized topically  Vignettes that represented and encapsulated important messages

11 How Themes Emerged from Data

12 Emergent Themes  Working in borderlands The participants’ narratives of teaching in the controlled environment of the prison reflected feelings of isolation, dislocation, and dissonance.

13 Emergent Themes  Negotiating power relations The participants adjusted to the restrictions of the prison environment and created a hybrid pedagogy to meet the educational needs of their inmate students

14 Emergent Themes  Making Personal transformations The experience of teaching in prison provided the participants with new understandings that led them to make changes in their personal value systems

15 Interpretation Through a One Act Play  Scene One: Going Inside  Scene Two: Learning the Rules  Scene Three: Finding Rewards

16 Recommendations  For researchers Discursive environments, such as prisons, offer distinct settings in which to interpret and present everyday life (Gubrium & Holstein, 2003).

17 Recommendations  For Policy Makers “Prisoners may … be the only group of U.S. citizens systematically barred from public support for access to higher education” (Torre & Fine, 2005)

18 Recommendations  For Community College Practitioners Prison education fits well with community colleges’ commitment to providing low cost access to higher education.

19 Thank you! Please direct any inquiries to Cliff Harbour Community College Leadership Program Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523 970-491-5425 Cliff.harbour@cahs.colostate.edu Susanna Spaulding Colorado Mountain College 901 South Highway 24 Leadville, CO 80461 sspaulding@coloradomtn.edu


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