Bennington College Launches Prison Education Initiative

BENNINGTON, VT – Bennington College recently launched the Prison Education Initiative, through which the college will be offering courses with transferable credits to prisoners at Great Meadow Correctional Facility in Comstock, NY, a maximum-security prison with 1,600 inmates.

The Prison Education Initiative was developed at a Think Tank about the question of higher education in prison held in April at the college’s Center for the Advancement of Public Action (CAPA). Panelists and advisors included the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, the Superintendent and Deputy Superintendent of Great Meadow Correctional Facility, the Bard Prison Initiative, Hudson Link, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, JustLeadershipUSA, College and Community Fellowship and a number of other dedicated people.

“That less than seven months after the Think Tank, the first Prison Education Initiative class was held at Great Meadow is a consequence of some of the most brilliant and effective thinkers and leaders in the country coming together to exchange ideas and experience,” says Susan Sgorbati, director of Center for the Advancement of Public Action. “The Prison Education Initiative offers a practical and effective educational service that reflects the values and traditions of Bennington College.”

Bennington is following a model first introduced by the Bard Prison Initiative. Bennington joins Bard College, Cornell University and other colleges and universities in offering courses in New York state.

Before the 1994 Crime Bill, incarcerated students had access to higher education via Pell Grants, which are federally funded need-based grants available to low-income undergraduate and certain post-baccalaureate students to promote access to postsecondary education. In the Crime Bill of 1994, Pell Grants for incarcerated students were discontinued, and post secondary education in prisons was drastically reduced. Currently, the programs offered by colleges and universities are privately funded.

Incarcerated individuals who participated in post secondary correctional education were less likely to return to prison than prisoners who did not. The Bard Prison Initiative found that, among formerly incarcerated participants in the program, fewer than two percent have returned to prison; nationwide, nearly 68 out of every 100 prisoners are rearrested within three years of release, and more than half return to prison.

Faculty members David Bond and Annabel Davis-Goff are currently co-teaching a college-preparation course at Great Meadow. In the spring, inmate students will take credit-bearing courses in social science, literature and American history. The credits earned through the Prison Education Initiative will be transferable. The courses taught are identical in content and standards to those offered at Bennington.

The Bennington Prison Education Initiative is part of Bennington College’s CAPA Incarceration in America initiative. Faculty member Annabel Davis-Goff is the director of Bennington’s Incarceration in America Initiative. It is funded by the College and by the Harry J. Brown Jr. Private Foundation.

Featured

  • Embry-Riddle Completes Construction on Research, Lab Facility

    Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU) in Daytona Beach, Fla., recently announced the end of construction on a new research and lab facility on campus. The Center for Aerospace Engineering II (CAT II) will support aerospace research and technology development and broke ground last summer.

  • S4L Announces 2026 Education Design Showcase Winners

    Spaces4Learning is thrilled to announce the winners of the 2026 Education Design Showcase! Now in its 27th year, the annual awards program honors innovative solutions in planning, design, architecture, and construction across K–12 and higher education.

  • Virginia Tech Tops Out New College of Engineering Building

    Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., recently celebrated the topping out of Mitchell Hall, which will soon stand as the largest College of Engineering building on campus, according to a news release. The university partnered with Skanska on the 285,500-square-foot facility, which has an expected completion date of winter 2028.

  • Surging Demand for Student Housing Fuels Major Campus Investment Opportunities

    University leaders throughout the U.S. are accelerating plans to modernize and expand student housing as enrollment stabilizes and demand for on-campus living rebounds. Recent data from the National Center for Education Statistics indicates that total postsecondary enrollment is projected to grow through the end of the decade, with undergraduate enrollment alone expected to increase by more than 8 percent by 2030.