Higher Education for all: Prisoners, Social Justice, and Digital Technology
Edited book (chapter)
Chapter Title | Higher Education for all: Prisoners, Social Justice, and Digital Technology |
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Book Chapter Category | Edited book (chapter) |
ERA Publisher ID | 2865 |
Book Title | Histories and Philosophies of Carceral Education: Aims, Contradictions, Promises and Problems |
Authors | Farley, Helen and Seymour, Stephen |
Editors | Harmes, Marcus, Harmes, Barbara and Harmes, Meredith A |
Page Range | 163-187 |
Chapter Number | 8 |
Number of Pages | 25 |
Year | 2022 |
Publisher | Palgrave Macmillan |
Place of Publication | Switzerland |
ISBN | 9783030868307 |
9783030868321 | |
9783030868291 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-86830-7_8 |
Web Address (URL) | https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-86830-7_8 |
Abstract | As most universities move to blended or entirely online digital delivery models, large cohorts of students are excluded from participation. For those universities that espouse the idea that education is democratic, this proves to be problematic. The digital delivery of education, while enabling participation from certain groups such as regional learners or stay-at-home carers, excludes those without ready access to technology or connectivity. Prominent among the latter group are prisoners who in most correctional jurisdictions do not have access to modern technologies or to the internet. This chapter will examine how one university, the University of Southern Queensland, responded to the challenge of delivering digital higher education to prisoners. The journey has been a tortuous one that began with a few idealistic academics acting as champions some three decades ago and became a university-wide project pushing the boundaries of what was technically possible and culturally palatable. The university is now the largest supplier of higher education into prisons in Australia and one of the largest in the world. This chapter will argue that this was enabled by a shift in culture in both the university and in the correctional jurisdictions in which it operates. The university has challenged the largely unspoken but widely held notion that prisoners have limited intellects and are only capable of completing low-level qualifications. The incarcerated learners engaged with the university boast both higher retention rates and better results than their non-incarcerated counterparts. |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 3999. Other Education |
Public Notes | b |
Byline Affiliations | University of Canterbury, New Zealand |
University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/z5w46/higher-education-for-all-prisoners-social-justice-and-digital-technology
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