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EDUCATE, DON'T INCARCERATE!
We bring therapeutic writing workshops to individuals and communities who are impacted by incarceration for advocacy, education and literacy development.
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Partners and Programs
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Hour Children
These zoom writing workshops with women in re-entry provide a fun, safe space to share poetry and spoken word exploring diverse themes around family, values, and ideas.
John Jay College Institute for Justice and Opportunity
While our work with people in prison is on hold, we continue our workshops via zoom with college and potential college students at the Institute exploring a variety of genres for self-expression.
Rikers Island Jail
We provide weekly distance writing lessons that are fun, reflective and educational to provide a meaningful outlet of expression and entertainment for our young friends who are being held at Rikers.
Taconic Correctional Facility
In these workshops with women preparing for reentry, we work with them on resumes, cover letters and expressive writing.
Imani's Safe House
In this partnership Prison Writes is working with Imani's Safe House founder and director to support the Action Against Gender violence project which is enaging with impacted women to gain insight into why or why not women report violence against them.
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New York City Administration of Children's Services
Through this partnership we've worked with youth in Close to Home residences throughout NYC as well as foster care and former foster care youth to develop literacy and advocacy skills.
In our workshops with young people in Bronxconnect alternative to incarceration program we use writing to explore themes of community, healing and resilience.
Brooklyn District Attorney's Office of Reentry Programs
In these workshops with young people in the Gender Responsive Re-entry Assistance Program, we use writing to help participants develop their confidence and build their social and communication skills.
About the School to Prison Pipeline
The United States incarcerates more people than any other nation in the world. The school-to-prison pipeline is a national trend of funneling children out of public schools and into the criminal justice system. “Zero-tolerance” policies that encourage police presence in schools and utilize harsh punishments for minor infractions disproportionately affect racial minorities and children with learning disabilities.
African American students are 3.5x more likely than white classmates to be suspended or expelled
U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights. (2014). CIVIL RIGHTS DATA COLLECTION
Data Snapshot: School Discipline.
Retrieved from https://ocrdata.ed.gov/Downloads/CRDC-School-Discipline-Snapshot.pdf
Black students represent 31% of school-related arrests
U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights. (2014). CIVIL RIGHTS DATA COLLECTION
Data Snapshot: School Discipline.
Retrieved from https://ocrdata.ed.gov/Downloads/CRDC-School-Discipline-Snapshot.pdf
Students suspended or expelled are 3x more likely to be juvenile justice involved the following year
Fabelo, T., Thompson, M., Plotkin, M., Carmichael, D., Marchbanks, M., Booth, E. (2011). Breaking Schools Rules: A Statewide Study of How School Discipline Relates to Students’ Success and Juvenile Justice Involvement.
Retrieved from https://csgjusticecenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Breaking_Schools_Rules_Report_Final.pdf
The Incarcerated Youth
The majority of incarcerated youth are suspended and/or expelled from school, and many had dropped out before being incarcerated.
Sedlack, A., McPherson, K. (2010). Survey of Youth in Residential Placement: Youth’s Needs and Services.
Retrieved from https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/grants/227660.pdf
1 in 3 meet the criteria for a learning disability - this is 4x higher than youth in the community
Leone, P., Weinberg, L. (2012). Addressing the Unmet Educational Needs of Children and Youth in the Juvenile Justice and Child Welfare Systems.
Retrieved from https://cjjr.georgetown.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/EducationalNeedsofChildrenandYouth_May2010.pdf
>50% have reading and math skills levels significantly below their grade levels. 60% have repeated a grade
The Council of State Governments Justice Center. (2015). Locked Out: Improving Educational and Vocational Outcomes for Incarcerated Youth.
Educate, Don't Incarcerate
The higher the degree, the lower the recidivism rate: education for the incarcerated population reduces violence in correctional facilities, significantly increases chances of employment after release, and cuts the correctional budget by millions of dollars in the long term.
(Prison Studies Project. (2018). Why Prison Education? Link)
Only approximately 50% of incarcerated adults have a high school degree or equivalent
Harlow, C. (2003). Education and Correctional Populations.
Retrieved from https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ecp.pdf
Inmates who participated in correctional education programs had 43% lower odds of recidivating
Davis, L., Bozick, R., Steele, J., Saunders, J., Miles, J. (2013). Evaluating the Effectiveness of Correctional Education: A Meta-Analysis of Programs That Provide Education to Incarcerated Adults.
Retrieved from https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR266.html
Recidivism rate for GED completers is 22% lower and 44% lower for college degree completers
Steurer, S., Linton, J., Nally, J., Lockwood, S. (2010). The Top-Nine Reasons to Increase Correctional Education Programs.
Retrieved from http://www.ceanational.org/images/Steurer_August2010-CT.PDF
Literacy Development & Therapeutic Writing: Why it’s Important
Inmates have a 16% chance of recidivism with literacy education, and a 70% chance of recidivism with no literacy education.
(Begin to Read. (2015). Literacy Statistics. Link)
60% of prison inmates and 85% of juvenile offenders are functionally illiterate
Gaston Literacy Council. (2018). Literacy in America.
Retrieved from http://gastonliteracy.org/Literacy-Facts/Literacy-in-America
>50% of incarcerated people suffer from a mental illness
James, D., Glaze, L. (2006). Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates.
Retrieved from https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/mhppji.pdf
90% of women incarcerated at an NY state prison report suffering physical or sexual violence in their lifetimes
Correctional Association of New York. (2013). One in three girls.
Retrieved from http://www.correctionalassociation.org/news/one-in-three-girls
Women and Girls in the Prison System
Understanding that women more often than not enter the criminal justice system as survivors, we create an atmosphere of mutual aid with a strengths based approach. Gender responsive programs take into account that women have different pathways through the systems than men.
1/4 of our participants identify as women.
In 2017, there were 225,060 incarcerated women in the U.S., 30% of the female prison population worldwide
World Female Imprisonment List
Retrieved from
https://www.prisonstudies.org/sites/default/files/resources/downloads/wfil_2nd_edition.pdf
Women’s state prison populations have grown 834% since 1978 and 2,879,000 women are jailed every year
The Gender Divide: Tracking Women's State Prison Growth
Retrieved from:
80% of the women jailed each year are mothers, including nearly 150,000 who are pregnant
Jail will separate 2.3 million mothers from their children this year.
Retrieved from https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2018/05/13/mothers-day-2018/