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Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Source: RAND Corporation

How Effective Is Correctional Education, and Where Do We Go from Here?


More than 2 million adults are incarcerated in U.S. prisons, and each year more than 700,000 leave federal and state prisons and return to communities. Unfortunately, within three years, 40 percent will be reincarcerated. One reason for this is that ex-offenders lack the knowledge, training, and skills to support a successful return to communities. Trying to reduce such high recidivism rates is partly why states devote resources to educating and training individuals in prison. This raises the question of how effective — and cost-effective — correctional education is — an even more salient question given the funding environment states face from the 2008 recession and its continuing aftermath. With funding from the Second Chance Act of 2007, the Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice, asked RAND to help answer this question as part of a comprehensive examination of the current state of correctional education for incarcerated adults and juveniles. The RAND team conducted a systematic review of correctional education programs for incarcerated adults and juveniles. This included a meta-analysis on correctional education's effects on recidivism and postrelease employment outcomes for incarcerated adults, as well as a synthesis of evidence on programs for juveniles. The study also included a nationwide survey of state correctional education directors to understand how correctional education is provided today and the recession's impact. The authors also compared the direct costs of correctional education with those of reincarceration to put the recidivism findings into a broader context.

Research Questions

  1. What is known about the effectiveness of correctional education programs for incarcerated adults?
  2. What is known about the effectiveness of correctional education programs for juvenile offenders?
  3. What does the current landscape of correctional education look like in the United States, and what are some emerging issues and trends to consider?
  4. What recommendations emerge from the study for the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal departments to further the field of correction education, and where are there gaps in our knowledge?

Key Findings

Adult Correctional Education Improves Postrelease Outcomes

  • Inmates who participate in correctional education programs had a 43 percent lower chance of recidivating than those who did not — a reduction in the risk of recidivating of 13 percentage points.
  • Providing correctional education can be cost-effective when it comes to reducing recidivism.
  • The odds of obtaining employment postrelease among inmates who participated in correctional education was 13 percent higher than for those who did not, but only one study had a high-quality research design.

Several Programs for Incarcerated Juveniles Show Promise

  • Two juvenile correctional education programs show promise: Read 180 and Florida's Avon Park Youth Academy.
  • The field is ripe for conducting larger-scale randomized trials.

Key Trends in the Current Correctional Education Landscape

  • The 2008 recession led to an overall 6 percent decrease in states' correctional education budgets between fiscal years 2009 and 2012, but it had a much larger impact on states with large and medium prison populations (a 20 and 10 percent decrease, respectively).
  • Most states reported using computers in correctional education, but student access to the Internet or Internet-based instruction was limited in most states.
  • Of the states planning to implement the more rigorous 2014 General Education Development (GED) exam that relies on computer-based testing, there are concerns about teachers being adequately prepared to teach it and about the time it may take to prepare students for it, as well as about the negative effect on GED completion rates. Medium and large states are expected to encounter more challenges.

Recommendations

  • Research needs to get inside the "black box" of what does and does not work in correctional education programs to help policymakers make programmatic tradeoffs in a resource-constrained environment.

  • Doing so requires (1) further developing the evidence base by leveraging grant mechanisms to encourage more rigorous research designs, measure intervention details like program dosage, and assess different educational instructional models, innovative strategies to implement information technology in the classroom and enhance instruction, and instructional quality in correctional education settings; (2) establishing a study registry to collect the information from such research; and (3) for the very nascent field of correctional education for incarcerated juveniles, developing large-scale randomized trials and rigorous natural experiments, encouraging partnerships between educators, correctional systems, and researchers, and ensuring the data on juveniles is being collected at the federal level.

  • Two trends merit policy attention. First, given the growing role of information technology in society, policymakers need to determine how to effectively leverage such technology for correctional education and assess its impact on instruction and outcomes. Second, the 2014 GED and the use of computer-based testing have raised serious concerns; policymakers should consider opportunities for technical assistance to educators to implement the more rigorous exam and computer-based testing. Beyond that, policymakers must assess and monitor the impact of the 2014 GED exam on students' preparedness and completion rates and on recidivism and employment outcomes.

Hawaii

USA Life Expectancy

LIFE EXPECTANCY ALL RACES

78.8681.3074.96United StatesHawaiiMississippi
States 
81.3081.0580.8280.7780.5280.4880.4580.3280.2880.2080.0279.9879.9279.8779.8479.7179.6479.5579.5279.4979.4779.4579.1979.0178.9678.8178.7378.5078.4978.4578.4378.3678.3478.2978.2378.0577.8177.7577.6177.5577.2376.9576.5376.3075.9775.9675.8875.7175.4275.4074.96Hawaii 1.Minnesota 2.Connecticut 3.California 4.Massachusetts 5.New York 6.Vermont 7.New Hampshire 8.New Jersey 9.Utah 10.Colorado 11.Wisconsin 12.Washington 13.Rhode Island 14.Nebraska 15.Iowa 16.Arizona 17.North Dakota 18.Oregon 19.Idaho 20.South Dakota 21.Florida 22.Maine 23.Virginia 24.Illinois 25.Maryland 26.Kansas 27.Pennsylvania 28.Montana 29.Texas 30.New Mexico 31.Delaware 32.Wyoming 33.Alaska 34.Michigan 35.Nevada 36.North Carolina 37.Ohio 38.Indiana 39.Missouri 40.Georgia 41.South Carolina 42.Wash DC 43.Tennessee 44.Kentucky 45.Arkansas 46.Oklahoma 47.Louisiana 48.Alabama 49.West Virginia 50.Mississippi 51.
MEASURES OF AMERICA: 2013-2014
Beginning in 2009 the US Gov has increased the amount of data they suppress for certain states, counties and races for privacy reasons due to small death counts. If the data you are looking for is not included that is likely the reason.


Saturday, December 27, 2014

Mesa, AZ - December 27, 2014

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Health

"Your health is your wealth."

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Passion and Inspiration


1 - "It is not the things we do in life that we regret on our death bed, it is the things we do not. 'Cuz I assure you I've done a lot of really stupid things, and none of them bothered me.  All of the mistakes and all the dopey things, and all of the times I was embarrassed, they don't matter.  Last August I was told that in all likelihood that I had three to six months left to live.  Somebody said to me in light of those numbers, 'Wow, so you're really beating the grim reaper.' We don't beat the reaper by living longer.  We beat the reaper by living well and living fully, for the reaper will come for all of us.  The question is what do we do between the time we're born and the time he shows up 'cuz when he shows up it's too late to do all the things that you always wanna kinda get around to." - Randy Pausch

2 - "When I was seventeen, I read a quote that went something like: ‘If you live each day as if it was your last, someday you’ll most certainly be right', and since then for the past thirty-three years, I've looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself, if today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I'm about to do today.  Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose.  You are already naked, there is no reason not to follow your heart." - Steve Jobs

3 - "And you will need to find your passion.  Many of you have already done it, many of you will later.  Many of you may take 'til you're thirties or forties, but don't give up on finding it, right, because all you're doing is waiting for the reaper." - Randy Pausch

4 - "As a child my parents always told me you could be whatever you want to be, you could do whatever you want to do, but I didn't totally believe it.  Yet, I went out in the world and I carried myself, and I held my head high, and I stood there, and I looked people in their eyes, and I talked to people as if I was deserving of everything that this planet has to offer.  I really want to say to children out there and to people who are watching.  Confucius said one time, 'He who says he can and he who says he can't are both usually right.' And I want you to keep in your heart just know that you can, know that you can.  And it is gonna get hard, and you're gonna want to quit sometimes, but it'll be colored by who you are, and more who you want to be.  I definitely found that wanting to be an actor stems from wanting to be somebody." - Will Smith
 
5 - "I said I'm not losing.  I'm still here.  I'm fighting, I'm not losing. When you die it does not mean that you lose to cancer.  You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live."  - Stuart Scott     

6 - "Find your passion and follow it.  You will not find that passion in things, and you will not find that passion in money because the more things and the more money you have, the more you will just look around and use that as the metric, and there will always be someone with more." - Randy Pausch

7 -  "I want the world to be better because I was here.  If you're not not making someone else's life better, then you're wasting your time.  You know, your life will become better by making other lives better.  The first step before anybody else in the world believes you is you have to believe it.  Being realistic is the most commonly traveled road to mediocrity.  Why would you be realistic? What's the point of being realistic?" - Will Smith

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Be Who You Are

 
"Be weird.  Be random.  Be who you are because you never know who would love the person you hide."
"If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams