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INSIDE-OUT CONFERENCE PROGRAM:

“EXPANDING THE BOUNDARIES OF LEARNING”

 

Thursday, October 2 Lilly Auditorium, IUPUI University Library

7:00-9:00 PM  KEYNOTE SPEECH:  “Exploring Issues of Crime and Justice from Inside the Walls,” Lori Pompa, Founder, Inside-Out Prison Exchange

Melissa Crabbe, Assistant Director, National Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program

 

Friday, October 3 University Place Conference Center

8:30-9:00 AM  Registration

 

9:00-10:15 AM  Opening Plenary

  Speakers:  Roger Jarjoura, Co-Founder, Inside-Out Indiana

  Khaula Murtadha, Assoc. Vice Chancellor for Lifelong Learning; Executive Director, Community Learning Network

  Robb Rich, Former Inside Student

 

10:15-10:30  AM Break

 

10:30-11:45 AM Concurrent Sessions:

  1.  For Students:  Inside-Out as Active Learning

  2.  For Faculty:  How to develop an Inside-Out course

  3.  For Department of Corrections Personnel:  Why have an Inside-Out class at your facility?

  4.  For Community Partners:  Supporting the Inside-Out model for prison education

 

12:00-3:30 PM Lunch and visits to our correctional facilities to meet our Inside and Outside students

 

3:45-4:45 PM Lives Changed by Inside-Out

  Angela Crafton and Anthony Persiano, Inside-Out Philadelphia

 

4:45-5:00 PM Closing Remarks

 

  Throughout the day, posters will be on display from Inside-Out instructors throughout the Midwest.

 

Background to the Inside-Out Midwest Conference at IUPUI

On April 25th 2005, the Justice Policy Institute announced that nearly 1,000 new individuals are now incarcerated each week in the U.S.  At any given time, the U.S. has more incarcerated people—now over 2 million—than any other country in the world.  At the same time, approximately 700,000 people are released from prisons every year, returning to communities where they lack the requisite skills to find jobs or pursue higher education.  This means that many of them will end up returning to prison, establishing a cyclical pattern that enmeshes impoverished communities and penal institutions in an ever-tighter web, reinforcing the exclusion of both from access to meaningful opportunities to improve their lives.

According to Sheila Kennedy, attorney, Indianapolis Star columnist and IUPUI faculty member, approximately 4400 of those people released from prisons return to Indianapolis every year, most of them unable to find honest employment (10-09-06).  This means that the majority will end up spending the remainder of their lives cycling in and out of the prison system.  The one intervention that has clearly been shown to reduce recidivism is prison education.  Despite this evidence, in 1994 Congress passed an act which made inmates ineligible for Pell Grants, thereby severely curtailing opportunities for inmates to pursue further education and training while imprisoned. 

The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program represents an innovative strategy for addressing the many social problems reinforced by cycles of incarceration including providing inmates with access to higher education and engaging university students in a deeper questioning of issues of crime and justice "behind the walls."  Developed by Criminal Justice professor Lori Pompa of Temple University, the Inside-Out program was initiated in 1997.  Since that time, students from Temple University have traveled regularly to prisons in the greater Philadelphia area to take courses alongside men and women who are incarcerated.  

Since 2004, with support from the Open Society Institute of the Soros Foundation and the Phoebus Criminal Justice Initiative, Pompa has offered training sessions for instructors from around the country who are interested in beginning Inside-Out programs in their own communities.  In August 2006, IUPUI faculty members Susan B. Hyatt (Anthropology) and G. Roger Jarjoura (SPEA) successfully completed the national training week and during Summer II 2007, they taught the first Inside-Out course in Indiana at the Plainfield Re-Entry Educational Facility (PREF).  Seven male IUPUI students and 7 “inside” students from PREF participated in the course.  Jarjoura taught a second Inside-Out course at PREF during Spring 2008 and Hyatt and Jarjoura taught a third course during Summer 2008 at the Indiana Women’s Prison (located just east of downtown Indianapolis).

In this conference, Inside-Out instructors from around the Midwest and our students will share our experiences and insights about this transformative pedagogy with you.  In addition, you will also have the opportunity to meet Lori Pompa and other founding members of Inside-Out.  Join us in Indianapolis on October 2-3!

Getting here

The conference will be held at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis (IUPUI).  Many dining, lodging, and leisure options are available in downtown Indianapolis including the White River State Park, which runs along IUPUI's southern border and includes the Indianapolis Zoo and White River Gardens, Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art, and the Indiana State Museum

The IndyGo Red Line bus route is free, stopping in front of the Campus Center and looping into downtown on a roughly 15-minute circuit. 

Those willing to drive a few minutes from campus can visit the Indianapolis Children's Museum, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and tons more lodging, food, and leisure options are available in the suburbs. 

Lodging

There are a ton of hotels in Indianapolis including many downtown within easy reach or walking distance of the IUPUI campus, and those looking to save some money can drive out to the suburbs and find even cheaper digs.  The Circle City Classic (a football game) is in town the weekend of the conference, so some downtown hotels will fill earlier than normal, but Indianapolis is utterly committed to car culture and its easy to drive into town from the suburbs.  The Indianapolis Convention and Visitors Association page has information on hotels as well as Bed and Breakfasts.  Some suburban hotels along I-465 (the beltway circling Indianapolis) will offer rooms at $65 a night, and downtown around IUPUI is more likely to run in the neighborhood of $175 or more depending on how many amenities you need.  We include some possibilities here, but feel free to email Sue Hyatt or Roger Jarjoura if we can help out at this end.  You may also find unadvertised specials (or rooms reserved at places that say they're already full) at Yahoo Travel, Indianapolis.com, and hotels.com.

Downtown (all are very close but more pricey than suburban hotels)

Last updated October 1, 2008