[PovertyRaceWomen 85] Re: economic impact of earning a GED while in prisonWilliam R Muth/FS/VCU wrmuth at vcu.eduThu Nov 30 01:59:09 EST 2006
Barbara (and all), To partially address the question of the efficacy of prison-based post-secondary programs: One study of vocational training programs (Saylor & Gaes, 1997) found a 33% greater survival rate among federal prisoners that participated in vocational training programs while incarcerated. This study enabled Federal Bureau of Prisons educators to find new funding sources for these programs after the elimination of Pell Grants in 1995. Here's the report: Bill Barbara Garner <b.garner4 at verizon.net> 11/29/2006 07:58 AM Please respond to b.garner4 at verizon.net To William R Muth/FS/VCU <wrmuth at vcu.edu>, b.garner4 at verizon.net, "The Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy Discussion List" <povertyracewomen at nifl.gov> cc Subject Re: Re: [PovertyRaceWomen 74] Re: economic impact of earning a GED while in prison Good point, Bill, I agree. The GED is a beginning, not an end point. What is happening with post-secondary programs, pre- and/or post-release, these days? Are they seeing a lot of success? Barb Garner ===================== From: William R Muth/FS/VCU <wrmuth at vcu.edu> Date: 2006/11/28 Tue PM 11:43:12 CST To: b.garner4 at verizon.net, "The Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy Discussion List" <povertyracewomen at nifl.gov> Subject: Re: [PovertyRaceWomen 74] Re: economic impact of earning a GED while in prison As I understand John Tyler's study,the signalling effect of the GED tends to benefit those who are least educatedand minority. These achievers enjoy higher wage earnings (although stillprobably at poverty-level) for three years after release from prison. Isthat such a negative finding? Should we expect the GED to be the "magicbullet" that solves the myriad of issues facing individuals returningto society: addictions, homelessness/renegotiating relationships with family,dangerous associations from the past, etc.? For me the take awaypoints from John's study are: (a) emphasizing quality foundational literacylearning prior to GED credentialing programs, and (b) then providing adequatepostsecondary programs (e.g., AA degrees in vocational/technology) to enablenewly released people to find meaningful, entry-level skilledwork. The GED is not the problem. It's just not a panacea either. -Bill Barbara Garner <b.garner4 at verizon.net> Sent by: povertyracewomen-bounces at nifl.gov 11/28/2006 04:56 PMPlease respond to b.garner4 at verizon.net; Please respond to "The Poverty, Race, Women and LiteracyDiscussion List" <povertyracewomen at nifl.gov> ToDaphne Greenberg <ALCDGG at langate.gsu.edu>,PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.govccSubject[PovertyRaceWomen 74] Re: economic impactof earning a GED while in prison I remember this article well, because the findingsare so disheartening for educators. An extensive query about the methodologywas conducted, but it couldn't be faulted. I'm very interested in the "why"-- is the stigma of prison outweighingthe usually positive (albeit small) effects of the GED? Do minorities show a slight earnings gain because they start with suchlow earnings? Does anyone have any insights ? Barb Garner Editor, Focus on Basics ===================== From: Daphne Greenberg <ALCDGG at langate.gsu.edu> Date: 2006/11/28 Tue PM 01:55:10 CST To: PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov Subject: [PovertyRaceWomen 72] economic impact of earning a GED while in prison On the Focus on Basics list, Julie McKinney, the list moderator postedanother article which may be of interest to some of you: What are the Economic Effects of Earning a GED in Prison? http://www.ncsall.net/?id=822 In case you don't feel like reading the whole article, the aspect thatI think is of interest to this listserv is that the study looked at thedifferences of the economic impact of earning a GED while in prison, betweenwhite and nonwhite ex-offenders: ?Among racial and ethnic minority offenders* primarily African Americans with a smaller number of Hispanics * we foundabout a 20 percent increase in the earnings among GED holders relativeto non-GED holders in the first post-release year. This effect declinedin the second year and by the third year it fell away to basically zero,?explains Tyler. ?We found that, for white offenders, there was no differencein the post-release earnings or employment for individuals who got a GEDversus those who did not.? Any thoughts/reactions? Daphne Daphne Greenberg Assistant Professor Educational Psych. & Special Ed. Georgia State University P.O. Box 3979 Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3979 phone: 404-651-0127 fax:404-651-4901 dgreenberg at gsu.edu Daphne Greenberg Associate Director Center for the Study of Adult Literacy Georgia State University P.O. Box 3977 Atlanta, Georgia 30302-3977 phone: 404-651-0127 fax:404-651-4901 dgreenberg at gsu.edu ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/diversity/attachments/20061130/c9007601/attachment.html -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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