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Schools Offering College Courses to Inmates - California

Prison University Project (PUP)

Program Website: www.prisonuniversityproject.org

Contacts: Jody Lewen, Executive Director, jlewen@prisonuniversityproject.org, 415-155-8088, ext 3

Program Description: Program offers courses in the humanities, social sciences, math, and science, leading to an Associates degree, as well as math, science, and foreign language courses required for transfer to UC and Cal State schools. All instructors work as volunteers. Prison University Project has five paid staff people. The degree is offered through Patten University, a small independent university in Oakland, CA.

Degrees Offered: Associate of Arts

Programs Offered: Associate of Arts Degree program [20 classes (60 semester units) required for completition.] In addition to the classes required for the Associate of Arts degree, the program also offers classes necessary to fulfill the requirements for transfer-eligibility to the University of California and California State school systems. College Preparatory Program in math and English available to prepare students for the college-level program.

Unique Features: Any mainline, level II, program-eligible person at San Quentin who holds a high school diploma or GED is welcome to enroll. Virtually all students start out in the College Prep program (in math and English) - usually for their first year; a small number place out of these courses by exam. Strong emphasis is placed on college readiness and academic rigor. Students pay no fees or tuition; PUP lends students the textbooks they need, and gives them the necessary school supplies. We do not screen for commitment offense, length of sentence/time left to serve, age, or any other similar criteria. All faculty work as volunteers. All primary instructors hold at least a master’s degree.

Headquarters: San Quentin, CA

Correctional Facilities Served: San Quentin State Prison

Population Served: Anyone who is classified as general population and holds either a GED or high school diploma is eligible to enroll in the College Program.

Number of Students: Approximately 400 per year

Graduates to Date: Over 100

Year Founded: 1996

Founders: Naomi Janowitz

College/University/Organization Partnerships: Patten University

Funding: Funded entirely by grants from individuals and mostly small and medium-sized foundations. No state or federal funding.


UC Santa Cruz Project for Inmate Education (UCSC PIE)

Program Website: www.ucolick.org/~krumholz/pie.html

Contacts: Mark Krumholz, krumholz@ucolick.org

Program Description: UCSC PIE is an organization founded by members of the UCSC astronomy and physics departments that is dedicated to providing free education to incarcerated people in local jails. UCSC PIE started operating in spring 2009 with an algebra class for students at the Santa Cruz County Jail.

As of 2010, founder Mark Krumholz received a prestigious Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation, which will provide support to UCSC PIE.

Classes are taught by Krumholz and other UCSC faculty and graduate students. UCSC PIE mirrors Princeton’s Prison Teaching Initiative, which Krumholz also founded.

Degrees Offered: No degree offered

Programs Offered: Algebra (spring 2009), Math 2 (summer 2010, winter 2011)

Unique Features: N/A

Headquarters: Santa Cruz, CA

Correctional Facilities Served: Santa Cruz County Jail

Population Served: Incarcerated students in the Santa Cruz county jail

Number of Students: 4 in total since program founding

Graduates to Date: N/A

Year Founded: 2009

Founders: Mark Krumholz

College/University/Organization Partnerships: UC Santa Cruz Extension

Funding: NSF CAREER award funds; another National Science Foundation grant: PIE is partly funded through National Science Foundation grants AST-0807739 and CAREER-0955300 to Mark Krumholz.

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