General Educational Development (GED) Programs: Difference between revisions
Bulk import of page templates |
Humanization pass: prose rewrite for readability |
||
| (10 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{MetaDescription|Learn about General Educational Development (GED) Programs's federal case, conviction, and prison experience on Prisonpedia.}} | |||
'''General Educational Development (GED) programs''' in the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) are mandatory literacy and high school equivalency initiatives provided to inmates who don't have a verified high school diploma or equivalent credential.<ref name="ps-5350">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Program Statement 5350.28: Literacy Program (GED Standard)," December 1, 2003, https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5350_028.pdf.</ref> Every federal correctional institution runs these programs, and they require affected inmates to participate for at least 240 instructional hours or until they successfully get a GED credential, whichever comes first.<ref name="ps-5350" /> They're the foundation of the BOP's inmate education system. The goal is straightforward: give people the academic skills they'd get from high school graduation, boost their chances of finding work after release, and lower how many people return to prison.<ref name="bop-education">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Education Programs," accessed November 20, 2025, https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/education.jsp.</ref> | |||
The GED credential is recognized nationwide as a high school equivalency certificate.<ref name="ged-testing">GED Testing Service, "Federal Bureau of Prisons Policy," accessed 2025, https://www.ged.com/policies/fbop/.</ref> Inside federal prisons, the literacy program and GED prep are basically the same thing for inmates who aren't at high school level yet.<ref name="ps-5350" /> BOP Program Statement 5350.28 governs these programs, and they're part of larger reentry preparation efforts tied to the First Step Act and earlier laws.<ref name="ps-5350" /><ref name="fsa-guide">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "First Step Act Approved Programs Guide," 2023, https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/docs/fsa_guide_eng_2023.pdf.</ref> | |||
== Summary == | |||
GED programs are the core mandatory education component in the Federal Bureau of Prisons.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Any inmate who hasn't verified a high school diploma or prior GED credential gets enrolled in the literacy/GED program when they arrive at a designated institution.<ref name="ps-5350" /> The mandatory period is 240 instructional hours or until the inmate gets the GED, whichever happens first.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Inmates with limited English proficiency go through mandatory English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) classes first until they hit eighth-grade English proficiency, then they move into standard GED coursework.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
- | Classes happen daily, usually in sessions of at least 1.5 hours, taught by qualified education staff.<ref name="ps-5350" /> The curriculum covers four GED test subjects: Reasoning Through Language Arts, Mathematical Reasoning, Science, and Social Studies.<ref name="ged-testing" /> Testing gets administered by the official GED Testing Service. The BOP partners with them for credential issuance, transcripts, and diplomas out of Washington, D.C.<ref name="ged-testing" /> Inmates can test in English or Spanish and may combine modules in both languages to get the credential.<ref name="ged-testing" /> | ||
Participation matters. Satisfactory progress matters even more.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Inmates sentenced under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (VCCLEA) or the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) who refuse to participate or don't make satisfactory progress get limited to 42 days of good conduct time credit per year instead of the full 54 days.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Some exemptions exist for pretrial detainees, inmates with deportable alien status, severe medical conditions, or those with verified waivers, but most people can participate voluntarily if they want.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
- ( | Programs run at every security level and in every BOP facility across administrative maximum, high, medium, low, and minimum-security institutions plus satellite camps.<ref name="bop-education" /> Waiting lists might exist at some facilities because of space and staffing constraints, but priority goes to those with the soonest projected release dates.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | ||
== History == | |||
The mandatory GED/literacy requirement came from the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (VCCLEA), which first linked good conduct time credits to education participation for violent offenders.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Then the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996 (PLRA) expanded it, making satisfactory progress in a literacy program the condition for certain inmates to earn the full 54 days of good conduct time per year.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
The Bureau formalized everything in Program Statement 5350.28, Literacy Program (GED Standard). It first came out in 1995, most recently updated December 1, 2003.<ref name="ps-5350" /> The statement laid out the 240-hour minimum, exemption categories, progress monitoring procedures, and pay or promotion incentives for participating.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Older versions of the policy existed under the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 and Vocational Education Act provisions, but the 1994–1996 legislation made participation essentially mandatory by penalizing good conduct time.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
The GED test itself has changed through several versions: 1978, 1988, 2002, 2014, and the current computer-based version.<ref name="ged-testing" /> The BOP switched to computer-based testing in 2014 and rolled out the i-Connect Inmate Education Network starting in 2016. That allowed secure electronic delivery of GED prep materials and testing in a virtual environment.<ref name="bop-reentry">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Education, Certification and Programming: Keys to Reentry," March 20, 2023, https://www.bop.gov/resources/news/20230320_education_certification_and_programming.jsp.</ref> No correctional system anywhere else had done virtual testing like that before.<ref name="bop-reentry" /> | |||
The Second Chance Act of 2008 and the First Step Act of 2018 both made GED completion an Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction (EBRR) program. That meant inmates could earn time credits toward early transfer to prerelease custody or supervised release.<ref name="fsa-guide" /> Now when inmates finish their GED while locked up, they get FSA time credits on top of the traditional good conduct time benefits.<ref name="fsa-guide" /><ref name="bop-reentry" /> | |||
== Program Requirements and Enrollment == | |||
When inmates arrive, education staff verify their high school diplomas and GED credentials.<ref name="ps-5350" /> If someone doesn't have anything verified or doesn't have any credentials at all, they go straight onto the GED waiting list.<ref name="ps-5350" /> The system assigns them a GED Progress assignment in SENTRY, which is the BOP's inmate management system, and they get called to classes based on custody level, what resources the facility has, and release date priority.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
Inmates with a verified eighth-grade or higher reading and math level go directly into GED prep classes.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Those testing below eighth-grade start in Adult Basic Education (ABE) classes until they reach that level.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Limited-English-proficient inmates get put in mandatory ESL until they hit CASAS (Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System) Level C, which is eighth-grade equivalent, and then they've got to get into GED classes.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
What counts as satisfactory progress? Regular attendance, active participation, and measurable academic gains on Tests of Adult Basic Education (TABE) or CASAS assessments that happen every 120 to 180 days.<ref name="ps-5350" /> If you don't make satisfactory progress, you get hit with an incident report for Refusing to Participate in an Inmate Program (Code 316). For PLRA and VCCLEA inmates, that automatically cuts them down to 42 days good conduct time per year.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
Inmates within 24 to 36 months of release get enrollment priority.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Those with life sentences or very long terms still have to participate. Unless they get a rare warden-approved waiver, which only happens for cognitive disability, age, or severe medical conditions.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
== Curriculum and Testing == | |||
The BOP GED curriculum matches the official GED test modules:<ref name="ged-testing" /> | |||
* Reasoning Through Language Arts (reading comprehension and writing) | |||
* Mathematical Reasoning | |||
* Science | |||
* Social Studies | |||
Instruction is classroom-based with certified teachers. It's supplemented by tablet-based or computer lab materials when facilities have them.<ref name="bop-education" /> Many places use PLATO, Edmentum, or AZTEC software for personalized instruction.<ref name="bop-education" /> Inmates with documented learning disabilities get special education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Section 504 accommodations.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
On-site certified examiners conduct GED testing.<ref name="ged-testing" /> The passing score is 145 per module out of 200.<ref name="ged-testing" /> If an inmate fails a module, they can retest after getting more help.<ref name="ps-5350" /> Once someone passes all four modules, the credential gets issued through the GED Testing Service with "District of Columbia" listed as the issuing jurisdiction for federal inmates.<ref name="ged-testing" /> | |||
== Impact and Outcomes == | |||
Bureau data shows it consistently. Inmates who get their GED while locked up have much higher post-release employment rates and lower recidivism than those who don't.<ref name="bop-reentry" /> Under the First Step Act, GED completion is the single most finished Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction program.<ref name="fsa-guide" /> As of 2023, thousands of federal inmates earn their GED every year. The pass rates stack up against or beat community adult-education programs.<ref name="bop-reentry" /> | |||
== Terminology == | |||
Key terms used in federal prisons when discussing GED and literacy programs are defined here.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
* '''GED (General Educational Development)''' refers to a battery of tests that, when passed, certifies the test taker has high school-level academic skills. Also refers to the credential itself.<ref name="ged-testing" /> | |||
* '''Literacy Program''' is the official BOP term for mandatory GED prep classes; synonymous with GED program for most inmates.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
* '''VCCLEA''' refers to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994. It covers inmates sentenced for violent crime offenses committed between September 13, 1994, and April 26, 1996.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
* '''PLRA''' refers to the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996. These are inmates sentenced for offenses committed on or after April 26, 1996, convicted of certain violent or drug-related crimes; they're subject to the 42 or 54-day good conduct time restriction.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
* '''Satisfactory Progress''' is defined in P5350.28 as regular attendance and measurable skill gains on standardized assessments.<ref name="ps-5350" /> | |||
* '''EBRR Program''' refers to Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction Program under the First Step Act. GED completion is classified as an EBRR and earns FSA time credits.<ref name="fsa-guide" /> | |||
== See also == | |||
* [https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/education.jsp Federal Bureau of Prisons – Education Programs] | |||
* [https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5350_028.pdf BOP Program Statement 5350.28 – Literacy Program (GED Standard) (PDF)] | |||
* [https://www.ged.com/policies/fbop/ GED Testing Service – Federal Bureau of Prisons Policy] | |||
* [https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/docs/fsa_guide_eng_2023.pdf First Step Act Approved Programs Guide (includes GED as EBRR)] | |||
== References == | |||
<references /> | |||
[[Category:Prison Programming]] | |||
{{#seo: | |||
|title_mode=append | |||
|title_separator= - Prisonpedia | |||
|description=Guide to GED programs in federal prison. Learn about earning your high school equivalency while incarcerated. | |||
|keywords=GED, prison education, high school equivalency, BOP education, literacy | |||
|type=article | |||
|site_name=Prisonpedia | |||
|locale=en_US | |||
}} | |||
<html> | |||
</html> | |||
Latest revision as of 17:53, 23 April 2026
General Educational Development (GED) programs in the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) are mandatory literacy and high school equivalency initiatives provided to inmates who don't have a verified high school diploma or equivalent credential.[1] Every federal correctional institution runs these programs, and they require affected inmates to participate for at least 240 instructional hours or until they successfully get a GED credential, whichever comes first.[1] They're the foundation of the BOP's inmate education system. The goal is straightforward: give people the academic skills they'd get from high school graduation, boost their chances of finding work after release, and lower how many people return to prison.[2]
The GED credential is recognized nationwide as a high school equivalency certificate.[3] Inside federal prisons, the literacy program and GED prep are basically the same thing for inmates who aren't at high school level yet.[1] BOP Program Statement 5350.28 governs these programs, and they're part of larger reentry preparation efforts tied to the First Step Act and earlier laws.[1][4]
Summary
GED programs are the core mandatory education component in the Federal Bureau of Prisons.[1] Any inmate who hasn't verified a high school diploma or prior GED credential gets enrolled in the literacy/GED program when they arrive at a designated institution.[1] The mandatory period is 240 instructional hours or until the inmate gets the GED, whichever happens first.[1] Inmates with limited English proficiency go through mandatory English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) classes first until they hit eighth-grade English proficiency, then they move into standard GED coursework.[1]
Classes happen daily, usually in sessions of at least 1.5 hours, taught by qualified education staff.[1] The curriculum covers four GED test subjects: Reasoning Through Language Arts, Mathematical Reasoning, Science, and Social Studies.[3] Testing gets administered by the official GED Testing Service. The BOP partners with them for credential issuance, transcripts, and diplomas out of Washington, D.C.[3] Inmates can test in English or Spanish and may combine modules in both languages to get the credential.[3]
Participation matters. Satisfactory progress matters even more.[1] Inmates sentenced under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (VCCLEA) or the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) who refuse to participate or don't make satisfactory progress get limited to 42 days of good conduct time credit per year instead of the full 54 days.[1] Some exemptions exist for pretrial detainees, inmates with deportable alien status, severe medical conditions, or those with verified waivers, but most people can participate voluntarily if they want.[1]
Programs run at every security level and in every BOP facility across administrative maximum, high, medium, low, and minimum-security institutions plus satellite camps.[2] Waiting lists might exist at some facilities because of space and staffing constraints, but priority goes to those with the soonest projected release dates.[1]
History
The mandatory GED/literacy requirement came from the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (VCCLEA), which first linked good conduct time credits to education participation for violent offenders.[1] Then the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996 (PLRA) expanded it, making satisfactory progress in a literacy program the condition for certain inmates to earn the full 54 days of good conduct time per year.[1]
The Bureau formalized everything in Program Statement 5350.28, Literacy Program (GED Standard). It first came out in 1995, most recently updated December 1, 2003.[1] The statement laid out the 240-hour minimum, exemption categories, progress monitoring procedures, and pay or promotion incentives for participating.[1] Older versions of the policy existed under the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 and Vocational Education Act provisions, but the 1994–1996 legislation made participation essentially mandatory by penalizing good conduct time.[1]
The GED test itself has changed through several versions: 1978, 1988, 2002, 2014, and the current computer-based version.[3] The BOP switched to computer-based testing in 2014 and rolled out the i-Connect Inmate Education Network starting in 2016. That allowed secure electronic delivery of GED prep materials and testing in a virtual environment.[5] No correctional system anywhere else had done virtual testing like that before.[5]
The Second Chance Act of 2008 and the First Step Act of 2018 both made GED completion an Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction (EBRR) program. That meant inmates could earn time credits toward early transfer to prerelease custody or supervised release.[4] Now when inmates finish their GED while locked up, they get FSA time credits on top of the traditional good conduct time benefits.[4][5]
Program Requirements and Enrollment
When inmates arrive, education staff verify their high school diplomas and GED credentials.[1] If someone doesn't have anything verified or doesn't have any credentials at all, they go straight onto the GED waiting list.[1] The system assigns them a GED Progress assignment in SENTRY, which is the BOP's inmate management system, and they get called to classes based on custody level, what resources the facility has, and release date priority.[1]
Inmates with a verified eighth-grade or higher reading and math level go directly into GED prep classes.[1] Those testing below eighth-grade start in Adult Basic Education (ABE) classes until they reach that level.[1] Limited-English-proficient inmates get put in mandatory ESL until they hit CASAS (Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System) Level C, which is eighth-grade equivalent, and then they've got to get into GED classes.[1]
What counts as satisfactory progress? Regular attendance, active participation, and measurable academic gains on Tests of Adult Basic Education (TABE) or CASAS assessments that happen every 120 to 180 days.[1] If you don't make satisfactory progress, you get hit with an incident report for Refusing to Participate in an Inmate Program (Code 316). For PLRA and VCCLEA inmates, that automatically cuts them down to 42 days good conduct time per year.[1]
Inmates within 24 to 36 months of release get enrollment priority.[1] Those with life sentences or very long terms still have to participate. Unless they get a rare warden-approved waiver, which only happens for cognitive disability, age, or severe medical conditions.[1]
Curriculum and Testing
The BOP GED curriculum matches the official GED test modules:[3]
- Reasoning Through Language Arts (reading comprehension and writing)
- Mathematical Reasoning
- Science
- Social Studies
Instruction is classroom-based with certified teachers. It's supplemented by tablet-based or computer lab materials when facilities have them.[2] Many places use PLATO, Edmentum, or AZTEC software for personalized instruction.[2] Inmates with documented learning disabilities get special education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Section 504 accommodations.[1]
On-site certified examiners conduct GED testing.[3] The passing score is 145 per module out of 200.[3] If an inmate fails a module, they can retest after getting more help.[1] Once someone passes all four modules, the credential gets issued through the GED Testing Service with "District of Columbia" listed as the issuing jurisdiction for federal inmates.[3]
Impact and Outcomes
Bureau data shows it consistently. Inmates who get their GED while locked up have much higher post-release employment rates and lower recidivism than those who don't.[5] Under the First Step Act, GED completion is the single most finished Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction program.[4] As of 2023, thousands of federal inmates earn their GED every year. The pass rates stack up against or beat community adult-education programs.[5]
Terminology
Key terms used in federal prisons when discussing GED and literacy programs are defined here.[1]
- GED (General Educational Development) refers to a battery of tests that, when passed, certifies the test taker has high school-level academic skills. Also refers to the credential itself.[3]
- Literacy Program is the official BOP term for mandatory GED prep classes; synonymous with GED program for most inmates.[1]
- VCCLEA refers to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994. It covers inmates sentenced for violent crime offenses committed between September 13, 1994, and April 26, 1996.[1]
- PLRA refers to the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996. These are inmates sentenced for offenses committed on or after April 26, 1996, convicted of certain violent or drug-related crimes; they're subject to the 42 or 54-day good conduct time restriction.[1]
- Satisfactory Progress is defined in P5350.28 as regular attendance and measurable skill gains on standardized assessments.[1]
- EBRR Program refers to Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction Program under the First Step Act. GED completion is classified as an EBRR and earns FSA time credits.[4]
See also
- Federal Bureau of Prisons – Education Programs
- BOP Program Statement 5350.28 – Literacy Program (GED Standard) (PDF)
- GED Testing Service – Federal Bureau of Prisons Policy
- First Step Act Approved Programs Guide (includes GED as EBRR)
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 1.24 1.25 1.26 1.27 1.28 1.29 1.30 1.31 1.32 1.33 1.34 Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Program Statement 5350.28: Literacy Program (GED Standard)," December 1, 2003, https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5350_028.pdf.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Education Programs," accessed November 20, 2025, https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/education.jsp.
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 GED Testing Service, "Federal Bureau of Prisons Policy," accessed 2025, https://www.ged.com/policies/fbop/.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Federal Bureau of Prisons, "First Step Act Approved Programs Guide," 2023, https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/docs/fsa_guide_eng_2023.pdf.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Federal Bureau of Prisons, "Education, Certification and Programming: Keys to Reentry," March 20, 2023, https://www.bop.gov/resources/news/20230320_education_certification_and_programming.jsp.