Professional Reflections 2022

Page 16

building emerging

leaders

CEHD STUDENTS IN THE NEWS The Association of American Colleges and Universities has awarded Dale M. Brown, a doctoral student in Teaching Learning and Educational Studies (TLES) and Philosophy, the prestigious 2022 K. Patricia Cross Future Leaders Award for his work in the Prison Education Outreach program. Brown established the program along with faculty advisor Dr. Fritz Allhoff through Western Michigan University in 2018. The program provides content modeled after traditional college courses to incarcerated individuals at Lakeland Correctional Facility in Coldwater, MI and has been on hold since the pandemic began. Brown is one of eight recipients selected out of nearly one-hundred nominees from around the world. “It is an honor to be nominated for the K. Patricia Cross Future Leaders Award,” shared Brown. “It is my hope that my commitment to academic innovation with respect to equity, community engagement, and teaching and learning is not only apparent but clearly foundational to what I have done and what I will do in the future.” The mission of the Prison Education Outreach program is to educate, challenge, and inspire program participants to achieve their academic, personal, and professional goals.

The program provided courses on critical thinking, ethics, ethics and social theory, and education and human flourishing to 66 unique individuals from the fall of 2018 to the spring of 2020. Despite the fact that the courses are not credit bearing, the program often had over 100 individuals on the waiting list for a class.

This has been one of the most fulfilling experiences of my life. Dale Brown

16 | Students in the News

The motivation to start the program is based on his family background and his own experience with the transformative power of higher education. Brown began researching the potential benefits of establishing a higher education outreach program for justice-involved individuals in the Summer of 2017. “Through this research, it became clear that the lack of opportunities for selfimprovement generally—and the lack of access to quality higher education specifically—was (and is) part of the systemic disadvantages faced by this marginalized population. Though not a total solution to the raciallydiscriminatory, class-reproducing, community-destroying practice of mass incarceration, college in prison remains, at the least, one of the most effective means of reducing the likelihood of a person returning to prison or jail upon release,” explained Brown. He wrote hundreds of emails and participated in numerous phone calls, video chats and in-person meetings with a variety of stakeholders to get the program off the ground. After graduation, Brown hopes to find a tenure-track position at an institution where he can also be the director of prison education program.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.