New program will help inmates earn high school diplomas with tablets
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[September 18, 2024]
By KATE PAYNE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A top supplier of digital devices in U.S.
prisons is launching a new program to help incarcerated individuals earn
a high school diploma by using the company’s tablets.
Advocates say the expansion in virtual education is promising,
especially since many inmates lack basic literacy skills. But some
advocates have said there are limits to what that prison technology can
accomplish.
The company ViaPath, which sells secure devices and telecommunications
services for use in the criminal justice system, has announced that
inmates across the country will soon be able to enroll in virtual
classes through a partnership with Promising People, an education
technology company, and American High School, a private online school
based in South Florida that will grant the diplomas.
The asynchronous classes will be available for free on ViaPath’s
tablets, 700,000 of which the company says are already in use in nearly
2,000 prisons and jails.
“If you get a high school diploma, you get a secondary education along
with some trades and skills. The likelihood of you recidivating back
into our prisons are very small,” said Tony Lowden, Chief Social Impact
Officer for ViaPath. “We believe there’s an opportunity to help men and
women come home differently.”
A meta-analysis by the RAND Corporation found that education
significantly reduces recidivism, suggesting that every $1 invested in
education in prisons could save $4-5 on reincarceration costs.
Lowden said the high school diploma program will offer a more
comprehensive education than existing GED courses and provide inmates
with greater earning potential once they’re released. The company said
it will also offer career and technical education through virtual
reality headsets.
ViaPath maintains that its tablets are free for inmates to use and that
it won’t charge for the educational programming. Still, prison telecoms
is a lucrative industry, with state and local governments signing
multimillion dollar contracts for phone services, tablets and apps that
inmates can use to call loved ones, stream music or read e-books — for a
fee. Charges for those services can rack up quickly for incarcerated
individuals who make just 25 cents an hour, if that, according to the
Prison Policy Initiative.
After being incarcerated for 11 years in Florida, Ryan Moser knows the
conveniences of prison tablets — and the shortcomings.
“There’s a lot of advantages to the tablet. You can study whenever you
want,” said Moser, who’s now a freelance journalist and communications
consultant.
But using a tablet behind bars isn’t like scrolling on an iPad at home,
Moser said. The devices are generally charged or updated at a central
kiosk inside the prison, and access can be inconsistent and
unpredictable — and is ultimately up to correctional officers.
“I remember it taking four days to get my tablet charged,” Moser said.
“If you were a discipline problem or if you were someone that gave them
an attitude, they might keep (your tablet) for a week, two weeks.”
Keri Watson heads the Florida Prison Education Project at the University
of Central Florida, which offers college-level courses inside prisons.
She has questions about the delivery of virtual instruction behind bars
but said she’s heartened by efforts to improve access.
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In this image provided by the North Fork Correctional Center in
Sayre, Okla., on Tuesday, June 9, 2021, an inmate Byron Robinson
works on a tablet, which are being provided for free to Oklahoma
inmates as part of a new program by the Department of Corrections.
(Lance West/Oklahoma Department of Corrections via AP)
“The more programs in as many modalities as possible, the better,”
Watson said.
Digital infrastructure has helped prisons continue offering programming
at times when volunteers can’t get inside, such as through the COVID-19
pandemic or during a security lockdown.
During the pandemic, Watson said her staff had to shift their in-person
classes to virtual instruction through tablets provided by a different
company. She said it was a difficult transition.
“The technology was not there,” she said. “So until it can be more like
the technology that can be offered to non-incarcerated students, I’m not
sure it’s feasible.”
The devices' functions are limited by design for security purposes.
Lowden, the ViaPath official, told The Associated Press that the
company's tablets will not carry notetaking apps due to security risks
like inmates communicating covertly.
Still, advocates say inmates desperately need more access to education
to prepare them for their release. According to the most recent annual
report for Florida’s state prison system, 1,339 inmates earned a GED in
2022, less than 2% of the state’s incarcerated population of more than
80,000 people.
“While participation in educational programming remains optional,
overall inmate participation in these programs continues to rise,” the
Florida Department of Corrections said in a statement to the AP. “The
Department has focused its resources on programming that addresses
functional literacy and vocational training.”
In his years as a GED tutor at a state prison near the Florida
Everglades, Moser saw the impact that a basic education could have on
his fellow inmates.
“I remember seeing the looks on guys’ faces,” Moser said. “Getting into
education and accomplishing something there was one of the proudest
moments for some of these guys in their life.”
Moser said the virtual high school diploma program could help meet the
basic educational needs of inmates and let them sidestep waiting lists
for in-person classes. But just like on the outside, he said there’s “no
substitute” for incarcerated students being able to sit in a real
classroom and learn from a qualified teacher.
___
Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America
Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national
service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on
undercovered issues.
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