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Prison Education

Prison education is 'chaotic' and often 'inadequate'. Joshua Rozenberg finds out where it is failing and how it can better help prisoners gain the skills needed to cut reoffending.

Prison education is 鈥渃haotic鈥, says the House of Commons Education Select Committee, and often 鈥渋nadequate鈥 says Ofsted. Yet, if done right, it can help reduce offending, and the number of victims, by giving prisoners the skills they need to get a job upon release. It鈥檚 no small task. Over half of prisoners have reading ages below 11. A large proportion have special educational needs. Many were expelled from school and have no qualifications. Yet education doesn鈥檛 seem to have been a priority. Now the government has promised a "step-change" for an improved Prisoners Education Service for England and Wales in its White Paper. Can it deliver?
In a special edition of Law in Action Joshua Rozenberg speaks to people whose expertise and experience spans the spectrum of prison education:

鈥 Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor
鈥 Chair of the Education Select Committee Robert Halfon MP
鈥 Governor Steven Johnson, Head of Reducing Reoffending at HMP Leeds, who speaks on education for the Prison Governors Association
鈥 Open University criminology lecturer, manager for students in secure environments, PhD candidate and former prisoner Stephen Akpabio-Klementowski
鈥 David Breakspear, former prisoner and prison education campaigner
鈥 Joe Tarbert, Employment Support and Partnerships Manager at Redemption Roasters
鈥 Neah, former prisoner and trainee barista at Redemption Roasters

Joshua puts some of their concerns to the Prisons Minister Victoria Atkins MP, and hears about the government's plans to improve prison education.

Presenter: Joshua Rozenberg
Producer: Arlene Gregorius
Editor: Hugh Levinson
Production coordinator: Maria Ogundele and Helena Warwick-Cross
Sound engineer: Rod Farquhar

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29 minutes

Last on

Thu 7 Jul 2022 20:00

Broadcasts

  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 16:00
  • Thu 7 Jul 2022 20:00

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