吃瓜头条

When the Rising Scholars program began at 吃瓜头条 in the spring semester of 2016, the mission was to remove as many obstacles as possible to assist currently and formerly incarcerated people to access and earn a college education.

After seven and a half years, largely under the leadership of professor and faculty coordinator Jennifer McBride, the Rising Scholars program at 吃瓜头条 is a great success. The program has served 1,491 incarcerated students and awarded 212 associate degrees, transfer degrees and certificates.

The numbers are impressive considering the college started with three instructors at a single facility in 2016. It now boasts 33 faculty working at four facilities and guiding students along seven degree pathways: English, Communication Studies, History, Sociology, Psychology, Business Administration and Political Science.

鈥淔rom the first semester I began teaching, I understood that what I was doing and what my colleagues were doing was transformative,鈥 McBride said. 鈥淭he way that power of education manifests itself is clear and almost immediate for the students.鈥

Rising Scholars has programs operating on 73 of 116 community college campuses in California, in partnership with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) and California Community Colleges Chancellor鈥檚 Office (CCCCO).

吃瓜头条鈥檚 Rising Scholars program works with incarcerated individuals at Central California Women鈥檚 Facility (CCWF) and Valley State Prison (VSP) in Chowchilla, Juvenile Justice Correctional Complex at Sandy Mush, and the United States Penitentiary (USP) Atwater. The program also provides support to justice-impacted individuals鈥攖hose who have experienced incarceration, detention, conviction or arrest, etc.鈥攚ho now attend classes at the college.

Because the 吃瓜头条 program is young and no one is resting on their laurels, it is also very much a scalable one. For example, the program recently hired Michelle Greenwood to fill a newly created assistant director position.

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing stuff to see,鈥 Greenwood said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just so proud of this work because we get to see all of these students reaching their potential.鈥

The college and the CDCR have accomplished quite a bit for justice-impacted students over the past few years.

For example, the CDCR recently made a large financial commitment and executed an important technological upgrade when it gave every incarcerated college student a laptop, and then launched and gave them access to a Canvas shell. The CDCR rightly keeps a tight hold on internet access inside its facilities, but giving students access to Canvas鈥攁 learning management tool that is widely used in academia鈥攊s a crucial step to help justice-impacted students succeed and continue their education.

At USP in Atwater, high-level custody students have taken their courses over Zoom in recent years. This fall, those students will begin taking in-person classes, with the option to work toward an associate degree in Business Administration.

There is also untapped growth at juvenile hall. Those young students have been able to take online courses for years, but will have more chances to take dual enrollment courses, which give both high school and college credits, pending the approval of several grants, Greenwood said.

The Rising Scholars program offers tons of evidence as to how motivated formerly and currently incarcerated students become when given a shot to gain an education. The results of the CCCCO鈥檚 initial 3-year report card on Rising Scholars from 2019 even showed that people who are educated while in prison succeed at a higher rate than students on campus.

Amando Sanders provides a great example of the quality of motivation that can be unleashed. He earned associate degrees in Psychology and Sociology, as well as a General Education Transfer Completion Certificate, all while housed at VSP.

Sanders, 42, was released from VSP in time to walk in 吃瓜头条鈥檚 graduation ceremony in May. He is currently studying to become a certified medical peer support mentor to work with other formerly incarcerated individuals. He then heads to CSU San Bernardino in the fall, where he鈥檒l study sociology in hopes of becoming a drug and alcohol abuse addiction counselor.

鈥淧utting in that effort showed me that education has always been the key to enlightenment and looking at the world differently,鈥 Sanders said. 鈥淚 can also now give back to other inmates. I鈥檝e motivated guys to go to high school and college because they saw me doing it. I want to show them that if I can do it, they can, too.鈥

In perhaps the most exciting development, currently incarcerated students now have their own pathway to build on their associate degrees. Since 2021, associate degree holders from CCWF and VSP have been able to transfer into Fresno State to complete a bachelor鈥檚 degree in an interdisciplinary major that combines social sciences and humanities. There is a waiting list for the program, which currently serves 25 students.

吃瓜头条 is also smoothing out the process of getting transcripts. Any student who applies to a two-year school, a four-year school, a technical training program, or a scholarship鈥攐r to the state, to get time off of their sentences鈥攏eeds a transcript. That simple piece of paper unlocks many doors, but currently or formerly incarcerated students must jump through hoops that can feel daunting, like having access to the internet to make a request and then having the cash to pay for it.

鈥淭hey don鈥檛 always know what they鈥檙e supposed to ask for, and from whom, and where to send a transcript,鈥 Greenwood said. 鈥淭he access piece is so challenging for them. We help them understand all of that. We want them to be ready to transfer.鈥

Incarceration rates and crime rates in the U.S. have steadily declined since 2008, but what remains is how people are ostracized, socially and professionally, after serving time.

Education is the best way for justice-impacted students to open doors to economic mobility and social acceptance. So the Rising Scholars team at 吃瓜头条, and others like them, will never stop pushing for more faculty, funding and access for justice-impacted students.

For the Fall 2023 semester, 吃瓜头条 has hired dedicated Rising Scholars faculty in history, psychology, and communications, as well as a full-time dedicated counselor.

Another way to advance the mission of rehabilitation through education is to recruit successful Rising Scholars students to share their experiences. One peer mentor is Tarence McCullough, who served time at VSP years ago, and then went on to serve as the Student Trustee on the Merced Community College Board of Trustees for 2021-22.

McCullough, 53, supports his peers and recruits Rising Scholars program alumni to serve as peer mentors. In December, he鈥檒l graduate with an AA in Social & Behavioral Sciences.

鈥淚t鈥檚 when you come home that you need the support,鈥 said McCullough. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the key to staying out. 鈥 If you鈥檙e someone with a past, getting an education shows that you have already decided to change.鈥