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- Title
Correctional Education as Democratic Citizenship Education.
- Authors
Cantrell, Dustin
- Abstract
Many educators view the process of education as transformative. This transformation is important in all classrooms, but it takes on added importance in prison classrooms. The education that inmates receive in prison can mean the difference between the doorway of freedom with a productive future and the revolving door of recidivism. For many prison educators, this transformative and liberating education process takes the form of democratic citizenship education. This article draws on interviews with five instructors from Ball State University's Department of Extended Education as well as the teaching experiences of the author. Although the subjects taught by these individuals range from computer science to English to anthropology, their approaches and views of transformation through democratic citizen education were very similar. By addressing the societal inequality that is reflected in prisons, these educators are themselves acting as engaged citizens. They show the twin ideas of awareness and action required of all citizens. These educators promote citizenship education in their classrooms by creating safe, democratic spaces that are dependent on sharing power with their students. Finally, they seek to transform their students into active, aware, and engaged citizens by fostering critical thinking skills, encouraging debate, and applying course lessons to the lives of their students.
- Subjects
EDUCATION of prisoners; CITIZENSHIP education; DEMOCRATIC socialism; PRISON educators; BALL State University; CLASSROOMS
- Publication
Journal of Correctional Education, 2013, Vol 64, Issue 1, p2
- ISSN
0740-2708
- Publication type
Article