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{{MetaDescription|Learn about Postsecondary Education Opportunities's federal case, conviction, and prison experience on Prisonpedia.}}
'''Postsecondary education in federal prison''' covers the range of learning available to people in the custody of the '''Federal Bureau of Prisons''' (BOP) above the high school level. The Bureau runs literacy and GED instruction at every institution. It also funds vocational training. College-level coursework is a different matter. For most of the past three decades, federal inmates who wanted a degree had to pay for correspondence courses out of their own pockets. That changed on July 1, 2023, when Pell Grant eligibility returned for incarcerated students after a ban that had stood since 1994.<ref name="ed-dcl">{{cite web |title=Eligibility of Confined or Incarcerated Individuals to Receive Pell Grants |url=https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/library/dear-colleague-letters/2023-03-29/eligibility-confined-or-incarcerated-individuals-receive-pell-grants-updated-sept-30-2024 |publisher=U.S. Department of Education |date=September 30, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>
'''Postsecondary education''' for individuals incarcerated in the '''Federal Bureau of Prisons''' (BOP) consists primarily of self-funded correspondence coursework obtained through accredited colleges and universities. Unlike the publicly funded literacy and GED programs offered directly by the Bureau, college-level education is not provided as a standard institutional service.  


Federal inmates seeking to pursue associate, bachelor's, or graduate degrees must generally arrange enrollment through external correspondence programs and bear the full financial responsibility themselves or through family support.<ref name="bop-education">{{cite web |title=Education |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/education.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
== Overview ==
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The BOP's official policy states that the agency "facilitates post-secondary education in vocational and occupationally oriented areas" and that "some traditional college courses are available, but inmates are responsible for funding this coursework."<ref name="bop-education"/>
Education inside the BOP is organized in tiers. At the bottom is mandatory literacy work. Federal policy requires inmates who lack a high school credential to enroll in the GED program, and an inmate generally must stay in it for a set period before any waiver applies. The Bureau provides this instruction directly. It costs the inmate nothing.<ref name="bop-education">{{cite web |title=Education |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/education.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


== Correspondence programs ==
Vocational training sits in the middle tier. The Bureau describes its postsecondary offerings as vocational and occupational in focus. Trade certifications, apprenticeships, and skills programs are run through individual institutions and vary from one prison to the next.<ref name="bop-education"/>


Several regionally accredited institutions offer print-based correspondence programs designed to accommodate incarcerated students. These programs allow students to complete coursework entirely through the mail, with examinations proctored by authorized facility staff.
College sits at the top, and until recently it sat mostly outside the Bureau's budget. The BOP's own policy statement is blunt about it. Some traditional college courses are available, the agency says, but inmates are responsible for funding that coursework themselves.<ref name="bop-education"/> Families often cover the bill. The return of Pell Grant money has begun to shift this, though slowly and at a small number of facilities.


'''Adams State University Prison Education Program''' (Alamosa, Colorado) is widely regarded as the leading provider of correspondence education for incarcerated students in the United States.<ref name="zoukis-federal">{{cite web |title=Federal Prison Education Programs |url=https://federalcriminaldefenseattorney.com/prison-life/prison-education-programs/ |publisher=Zoukis Consulting Group |date=May 16, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Accredited by the Higher Learning Commission, the program offers certificates, associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and a Master of Business Administration through print-based delivery.<ref name="asu-pep">{{cite web |title=Prison Education Program (PEP) |url=https://www.adams.edu/academics/pep/print-based/ |publisher=Adams State University |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Tuition rates are below average compared to similar programs, and students are given extended completion windows of up to twelve months per course. The program has served thousands of incarcerated students nationwide.<ref name="asu-pep"/>
== Education Levels (GED, Vocational, College) ==
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'''Ohio University Correctional Education''' has offered correspondence education to incarcerated students since 1974. The program provides associate and bachelor's degree options through print-based courses. As of December 2024, Ohio University announced a partnership with Adams State University to expand educational opportunities for its correctional education students, referring new enrollments to Adams State's Prison Education Program.<ref name="ohio-print">{{cite web |title=Print-Based Degrees and Programs |url=https://www.ohio.edu/online/programs/print/programs |publisher=Ohio University |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
=== GED and literacy ===
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Other institutions offering correspondence programs include Colorado State University, Upper Iowa University, Louisiana State University (individual courses and certificates), and several California community colleges including Coastline College and Lassen College, which enroll students from facilities nationwide.<ref name="zoukis-correspondence">{{cite web |title=Prison College Programs |url=https://federalcriminaldefenseattorney.com/correspondence-programs/undergraduate-degree/ |publisher=Zoukis Consulting Group |date=July 25, 2023 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Tuition for correspondence courses typically ranges from $165 to $350 per credit hour depending on the institution, with individual courses costing between $500 and $1,000.<ref name="zoukis-correspondence"/>
The GED is the foundation. An inmate without a high school diploma is required to participate in adult literacy instruction working toward the credential. The Bureau staffs these classes at every institution and treats completion as a baseline goal of incarceration. There is no charge. Inmates who already hold a diploma or equivalency are exempt.<ref name="bop-education"/>
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== Funding and financial assistance ==
=== Vocational and occupational training ===


=== Self-funding requirements ===
Vocational programs teach a trade. The specific courses depend on the prison. A given facility might run training in carpentry, welding, electrical work, HVAC, culinary arts, or commercial driving, often tied to an industry certification an inmate can carry into the job market after release. The Bureau frames these programs as occupational preparation rather than general education.<ref name="bop-education"/> Research has repeatedly tied them to better employment outcomes after release. A 2013 RAND analysis found vocational training was associated with a 28 percent higher likelihood of employment once an inmate got out.<ref name="rand-2013">{{cite web |title=Evaluating the Effectiveness of Correctional Education: A Meta-Analysis of Programs That Provide Education to Incarcerated Adults |url=https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR266.html |publisher=RAND Corporation |author=Lois M. Davis, Robert Bozick, Jennifer L. Steele, Jessica Saunders, and Jeremy N.V. Miles |date=August 22, 2013 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


For facilities without an approved Prison Education Program, incarcerated individuals remain responsible for all educational costs. Federal student loans are not available to incarcerated students regardless of program type.<ref name="ed-dcl">{{cite web |title=Eligibility of Confined or Incarcerated Individuals to Receive Pell Grants |url=https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/library/dear-colleague-letters/2023-03-29/eligibility-confined-or-incarcerated-individuals-receive-pell-grants-updated-sept-30-2024 |publisher=U.S. Department of Education |date=September 30, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Payment arrangements vary by institution; some programs permit course-by-course payment rather than requiring full program costs upfront.<ref name="asu-faq">{{cite web |title=Prison Education Program (PEP) FAQs |url=https://www.adams.edu/academics/pep/faqs/ |publisher=Adams State University |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Family members frequently assist with tuition payments on behalf of incarcerated relatives.
=== College and correspondence programs ===
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=== Nonprofit organizations and scholarships ===
College has long been the hardest tier to reach. Internet access is barred at most federal facilities, which rules out online coursework. That leaves print. A handful of accredited schools build their programs around the mail, shipping coursework and texts to inmates and proctoring exams through facility staff.


Several nonprofit organizations provide scholarships and financial assistance to incarcerated students pursuing postsecondary education.
Adams State University in Alamosa, Colorado runs one of the larger print-based programs. It is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and offers certificates, associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and a Master of Business Administration entirely through the mail. Students get extended completion windows, up to twelve months for a single course.<ref name="asu-pep">{{cite web |title=Prison Education Program (PEP) |url=https://www.adams.edu/academics/pep/print-based/ |publisher=Adams State University |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> Ohio University has offered correspondence education to incarcerated students since 1974, providing associate and bachelor's options through printed courses.<ref name="ohio-print">{{cite web |title=Print-Based Degrees and Programs |url=https://www.ohio.edu/online/programs/print/programs |publisher=Ohio University |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> Other schools, including several California community colleges, enroll incarcerated students from facilities across the country.<ref name="zoukis-correspondence">{{cite web |title=Prison College Programs |url=https://federalcriminaldefenseattorney.com/correspondence-programs/undergraduate-degree/ |publisher=Zoukis Consulting Group |date=July 25, 2023 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


'''The Prison Scholar Fund''' (Western Washington) provides scholarships for postsecondary distance education along with mentoring and advising services. The organization focuses on helping incarcerated individuals access educational opportunities that can facilitate successful reentry.<ref name="psf">{{cite web |title=Prison Scholar Fund |url=https://www.prisonscholars.org/ |publisher=Prison Scholar Fund |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
Where there is no Pell-approved program, the student or the student's family pays. Federal student loans are not available to incarcerated borrowers under any program type.<ref name="ed-dcl"/> Some schools let an inmate pay course by course rather than all at once.<ref name="asu-pep"/>
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'''Prison Education Foundation''' is a 501(c)(3) public charity that provides scholarships to incarcerated men and women pursuing higher education. The foundation uses a performance-based scholarship model, typically awarding initial grants for a limited number of credit hours and expanding support based on academic performance. Funding comes primarily from private foundations and corporate donations.<ref name="pef">{{cite web |title=Prison Education Foundation |url=https://www.prisonedu.org/ |publisher=Prison Education Foundation |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
== Pell Grant Restoration ==
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'''Education Justice Project''' at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign provides academic scholarships to individuals impacted by incarceration and operates a comprehensive college-in-prison program. The organization is a founding member of the Illinois Coalition for Higher Education in Prison.<ref name="ejp">{{cite web |title=Scholarships for Incarcerated |url=https://educationjustice.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Resources@EJP_Scholarship-Opportunities.pdf |publisher=Education Justice Project |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
For nearly three decades, federal financial aid was off the table for anyone in prison. The story of how that happened, and how it was undone, runs from 1994 to 2023.
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Major philanthropic foundations have also invested in prison higher education. The [[Andrew W. Mellon Foundation]] has awarded over $5 million in grants to organizations advancing higher education in prisons, including support for the Alliance for Higher Education in Prison and various university-based programs.<ref name="mellon">{{cite web |title=Mellon Announces Over $5M in Funding for Higher Education in Prisons |url=https://www.mellon.org/news/grants-to-increase-higher-education-opportunities-in-prisons |publisher=Andrew W. Mellon Foundation |date=June 2023 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> The Ascendium Education Group, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit focused on postsecondary access for underserved populations, has funded technical assistance initiatives and research on prison education programs.<ref name="air">{{cite web |title=Identifying and Scaling Higher Education in Prison Programmatic Resources |url=https://www.air.org/project/identifying-and-scaling-higher-education-prison-programmatic-resources |publisher=American Institutes for Research |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> The Laughing Gull Foundation has announced over $2 million in grants specifically for higher education in prison programs, with a focus on the Southern United States.<ref name="laughing-gull">{{cite web |title=Higher Education in Prison |url=https://laughinggull.org/higher-education-in-prison/ |publisher=Laughing Gull Foundation |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
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== National organizations ==
=== The 1994 ban ===


The '''Alliance for Higher Education in Prison''' is a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit network that supports practitioners, produces research, and advocates for expanding quality higher education in prison settings. Founded through a strategic planning process that began in 2015, the Alliance hosts the annual National Conference on Higher Education in Prison and maintains resources for colleges, correctional agencies, and students.<ref name="alliance-faq">{{cite web |title=FAQ and Policies |url=https://www.higheredinprison.org/frequently-asked-questions |publisher=Alliance for Higher Education in Prison |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> According to a 2022 Alliance survey, approximately 600 of the nearly 5,000 state and federal prisons and local jails in the United States have higher education programs.<ref name="mellon"/>
Incarcerated students could receive Pell Grants from the program's start in the 1960s through the early 1990s. That aid built a wide network of college programs behind bars. By the early 1990s, hundreds of college-in-prison programs operated across the country.<ref name="aei-history">{{cite web |title=The Second Chance Pell Pilot Program: A Historical Overview |url=https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/the-second-chance-pell-pilot-program-a-historical-overview/ |publisher=American Enterprise Institute |author=Gerard Robinson and Elizabeth English |date=September 2017 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>
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The '''[[Vera Institute of Justice]]''' has played a significant role in supporting prison education since the inception of Second Chance Pell, providing technical assistance to participating colleges and corrections departments. Vera publishes research on program outcomes and advocates for policies that expand educational access for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals.<ref name="vera-six-years">{{cite web |title=Second Chance Pell: Six Years of Expanding Higher Education Programs in Prisons, 2016–2022 |url=https://www.vera.org/publications/second-chance-pell-six-years-of-expanding-access-to-education-in-prison |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=June 2023 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
The [[Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act|Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994]], often called the Crime Bill, cut that off. It made every person held in a state or federal prison ineligible for a Pell Grant. The cut went through during a tough-on-crime stretch in national politics, even though aid to incarcerated students had been a small slice of the overall program.<ref name="ppi-crime-bill">{{cite web |title=Since You Asked: How did the 1994 crime bill affect prison college programs? |url=https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2019/08/22/college-in-prison/ |publisher=Prison Policy Initiative |date=August 22, 2019 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>
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== Historical context ==
The effect was fast. Programs that had relied on Pell money to operate folded almost at once. Within a few years the number of college-in-prison programs across the country had collapsed to a small fraction of what it had been.<ref name="aei-history"/> Several states pulled their own tuition aid for inmates soon after. What survived ran on private donations, volunteer teachers, and money from inmates and their families.<ref name="ppi-crime-bill"/>


=== Pell Grant eligibility and the 1994 Crime Bill ===
=== Second Chance Pell ===


From 1965 until 1994, incarcerated individuals were eligible to receive federal Pell Grants under Title IV of the Higher Education Act. This funding supported a substantial expansion of prison education programs nationwide. By the early 1990s, an estimated 772 college-in-prison programs operated across approximately 1,287 correctional facilities in the United States, with roughly 27,000 incarcerated students receiving Pell Grants during the 1993–94 academic year.<ref name="aei-history">{{cite web |title=The Second Chance Pell Pilot Program: A Historical Overview |url=https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/the-second-chance-pell-pilot-program-a-historical-overview/ |publisher=American Enterprise Institute |author=Gerard Robinson and Elizabeth English |date=September 2017 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
The first crack in the ban came in 2015. The Obama administration launched the Second Chance Pell Experimental Sites Initiative, a pilot that let a limited set of approved colleges award Pell Grants inside prisons. It started with dozens of schools and grew over the next several years to more than 160 colleges operating across most states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the federal system.<ref name="vera-six-years">{{cite web |title=Second Chance Pell: Six Years of Expanding Higher Education Programs in Prisons, 2016–2022 |url=https://www.vera.org/publications/second-chance-pell-six-years-of-expanding-access-to-education-in-prison |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=June 2023 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> The pilot served as proof of concept for full restoration.
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The [[Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act|Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994]], commonly known as the "Crime Bill," eliminated Pell Grant eligibility for all individuals incarcerated in state and federal prisons. Despite the fact that grants to incarcerated students constituted less than one percent of total Pell disbursements—approximately $35 million out of a $6 billion program—the provision was enacted amid broader "tough on crime" political sentiments of the era.<ref name="ppi-crime-bill">{{cite web |title=Since You Asked: How did the 1994 crime bill affect prison college programs? |url=https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2019/08/22/college-in-prison/ |publisher=Prison Policy Initiative |date=August 22, 2019 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> A Government Accountability Office report from that period found that grants to incarcerated students did not affect grants awarded to other eligible applicants.<ref name="gao-1994">{{cite web |title=Pell Grant Program: Incarcerated Student Participation |url=https://www.gao.gov |publisher=U.S. Government Accountability Office |date=1994 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
=== Full restoration in 2023 ===
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The consequences of the ban were immediate and severe. By 1997, the number of college-in-prison programs in the United States had collapsed from over 770 to an estimated eight programs nationwide.<ref name="aei-history"/> State legislatures followed the federal lead by rescinding state-level tuition assistance programs.<ref name="ppi-crime-bill"/> The remaining programs that survived depended entirely on private philanthropy, volunteer instruction, and out-of-pocket payments from incarcerated individuals and their families.
Congress lifted the ban for good in the [[FAFSA Simplification Act]], which was folded into the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, and signed into law in December 2020. The repeal did not take effect immediately. It was set to begin on July 1, 2023, the start of the next award year, which is the date Pell Grants again became available to incarcerated students after the 1994 cutoff.<ref name="vera-pell-restoration">{{cite web |title=How Pell Grant Restoration Impacts Jails |url=https://www.vera.org/publications/how-pell-grant-restoration-impacts-jails |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=December 19, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


=== Second Chance Pell and subsequent restoration ===
Restoration came with a condition. An inmate cannot simply enroll anywhere and draw Pell funds. The coursework has to be part of a Prison Education Program, a PEP, approved by the Department of Education and run by a public or nonprofit school. The approval process involves the school, its accreditor, the corrections agency that runs the facility, and the Department.<ref name="ed-dcl"/>


In 2015, the Obama administration announced the Second Chance Pell Experimental Sites Initiative, a pilot program that temporarily restored Pell Grant access to a limited number of approved colleges operating programs within correctional facilities. The initiative began with 67 participating institutions in 2016 and eventually expanded to include more than 160 colleges across 48 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons.<ref name="vera-six-years"/> Between 2016 and 2022, more than 40,000 incarcerated students enrolled in postsecondary education through the Second Chance Pell program, earning approximately 12,000 credentials including associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and certificates.<ref name="vera-six-years"/>
The first approved PEP inside the federal system came in 2024. Illinois Central College received Department of Education approval to run a program at FCI Pekin in Illinois, the first such approval at a federal facility.<ref name="bop-first-pep">{{cite web |title=Illinois Central College Approved for First Prison Education Program Inside Federal Bureau of Prisons |url=https://www.bop.gov/resources/news/20240913-first-prison-education-program-approved.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=September 13, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> More programs have followed at a measured pace.


Full restoration of Pell Grant eligibility came through the [[FAFSA Simplification Act]], signed into law in December 2020 as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The law took effect on July 1, 2023, ending the nearly 30-year prohibition on federal financial aid for incarcerated students.<ref name="vera-pell-restoration">{{cite web |title=How Pell Grant Restoration Impacts Jails |url=https://www.vera.org/publications/how-pell-grant-restoration-impacts-jails |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=December 19, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> Under the restored eligibility, students must enroll in a Department of Education-approved Prison Education Program (PEP) offered by a public or nonprofit institution to access Pell funds.<ref name="ed-dcl"/> The Vera Institute of Justice estimates that approximately 760,000 incarcerated individuals are now potentially eligible for Pell Grants.<ref name="vera-first-pep">{{cite web |title=After 30 Years, the First Program to Offer Pell Grants to Incarcerated Students Has Launched |url=https://www.vera.org/news/after-30-years-the-first-program-to-offer-pell-grants-to-incarcerated-students-has-launched |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=March 26, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
== How to Enroll ==
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== Current status of federal postsecondary programming ==
The path depends on what kind of program an inmate is after.


Despite the restoration of Pell eligibility, the development of approved Prison Education Programs within the Federal Bureau of Prisons has proceeded gradually. As of September 2024, Illinois Central College became the first institution to receive Department of Education approval for a PEP at a federal facility, specifically at FCI Pekin in Illinois.<ref name="bop-first-pep">{{cite web |title=Illinois Central College Approved for First Prison Education Program Inside Federal Bureau of Prisons |url=https://www.bop.gov/resources/news/20240913-first-prison-education-program-approved.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=September 13, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> The BOP continues to work with colleges and universities to establish additional Pell-eligible programs, building on its Second Chance Pell partnerships that operated at 14 facilities and awarded 265 associate degrees, 16 bachelor's degrees, and 18 certificates.<ref name="bop-first-pep"/>
For the GED, there is little to arrange. An inmate without a high school credential is placed in literacy instruction as a matter of policy. Staff in the institution's Education Department handle placement.<ref name="bop-education"/>
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For the majority of federal inmates, postsecondary education remains accessible only through self-funded correspondence courses. Enrollment in such programs requires authorization from the facility's Education Department, typically through the College Coordinator.<ref name="zoukis-federal"/> Students or their families must pay all tuition, fees, and textbook costs directly to the educational institution. Internet-based instruction is generally prohibited due to security restrictions, limiting options to print-based correspondence formats that rely on postal mail for all communication between students and instructors.<ref name="zoukis-federal"/>
For vocational training, an inmate signs up through the same Education Department. Availability differs by prison, and popular trade courses can carry a waitlist. Staff can explain which programs a given facility runs.<ref name="bop-education"/>


== Research on effectiveness ==
For a Pell-funded college program, the inmate has to be at a facility where an approved PEP operates. Where one exists, the institution's education staff manage enrollment and the financial aid paperwork, including the FAFSA.<ref name="ed-dcl"/> Coverage is still limited. Most federal facilities do not yet host an approved program.<ref name="bop-first-pep"/>


A 2013 meta-analysis conducted by the [[RAND Corporation]], funded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, examined the effectiveness of correctional education programs. The study found that inmates who participated in educational programs had 43 percent lower odds of recidivating than those who did not, translating to a reduction in the risk of returning to prison of 13 percentage points. Employment rates after release were 13 percent higher among participants in academic or vocational programs, with vocational training specifically associated with a 28 percent increase in the likelihood of post-release employment.<ref name="rand-2013">{{cite web |title=Evaluating the Effectiveness of Correctional Education: A Meta-Analysis of Programs That Provide Education to Incarcerated Adults |url=https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR266.html |publisher=RAND Corporation |author=Lois M. Davis, Robert Bozick, Jennifer L. Steele, Jessica Saunders, and Jeremy N.V. Miles |date=August 22, 2013 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
For a self-funded correspondence degree, the inmate works through the facility's Education Department, often a designated College Coordinator, to get authorization. The school is paid directly by the student or the family. All contact runs by mail, since internet coursework is not allowed.<ref name="zoukis-correspondence"/>
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The RAND study also concluded that correctional education is cost-effective. Researchers estimated that for every dollar invested in prison education programs, incarceration costs are reduced by four to five dollars during the first three years following release.<ref name="rand-2013"/> These findings were cited by the U.S. Departments of Justice and Education in support of the Second Chance Pell initiative and have informed subsequent policy discussions around restoring educational access for incarcerated populations.<ref name="doj-announce">{{cite web |title=Justice and Education Departments Announce New Research Showing Prison Education Reduces Recidivism, Saves Money, Improves Employment |url=https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/justice-and-education-departments-announce-new-research-showing-prison-education-reduces |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |date=August 22, 2013 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
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Separate research published by the Vera Institute found that people who participate in college-in-prison programs are 48 percent less likely to recidivate than those who do not, and that correctional facilities with college programs report reduced incidents of violence.<ref name="vera-snapshot">{{cite web |title=Second Chance Pell: A Snapshot of the First Three Years |url=https://www.vera.org/publications/second-chance-pell-snapshot |publisher=Vera Institute of Justice |date=June 2023 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
{{FAQSection/Start}}
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{{FAQ|question=Can federal inmates get a college degree in prison?|answer=Yes. Federal inmates can earn certificates and degrees through accredited correspondence programs delivered by mail, and, at a growing number of facilities, through Department of Education-approved Prison Education Programs funded by Pell Grants. Internet-based coursework is barred at most federal facilities, so college study generally happens through print.}}
{{FAQ|question=When were Pell Grants restored for incarcerated students?|answer=Pell Grant eligibility for incarcerated students took effect on July 1, 2023. Congress repealed the 1994 ban through the FAFSA Simplification Act, which was signed into law in December 2020 as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, with the change set to begin in the 2023 award year.}}
{{FAQ|question=Why were Pell Grants banned for prisoners in the first place?|answer=The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, known as the Crime Bill, made people in state and federal prisons ineligible for Pell Grants. The cut came during a tough-on-crime period in national politics and caused most college-in-prison programs to shut down within a few years.}}
{{FAQ|question=Does the GED program cost anything in federal prison?|answer=No. The Bureau of Prisons provides GED and adult literacy instruction at every institution at no cost to the inmate. Inmates who lack a high school credential are required to participate in the program.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is a Prison Education Program (PEP)?|answer=A Prison Education Program is a college program inside a prison that the U.S. Department of Education has approved to award Pell Grants. It must be run by a public or nonprofit school and cleared by the school's accreditor, the corrections agency, and the Department before students can receive federal aid.}}
{{FAQ|question=How does an inmate enroll in college in federal prison?|answer=The inmate works through the institution's Education Department. For a Pell-funded program, the facility must host an approved PEP, and staff handle enrollment and the FAFSA. For a self-funded correspondence degree, the inmate gets authorization from the Education Department and the school is paid directly by the student or family.}}
{{FAQ|question=Are vocational programs available in federal prison?|answer=Yes. The Bureau of Prisons runs vocational and occupational training that varies by facility, often tied to industry certifications in trades such as welding, carpentry, HVAC, and culinary work. Research has linked this training to higher employment rates after release.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


== Limitations and challenges ==
== References ==


Several barriers continue to limit postsecondary educational opportunities for federal inmates. Security restrictions prohibit internet access at most facilities, eliminating the possibility of online coursework that has expanded access for students outside the correctional system.<ref name="crimesolutions">{{cite web |title=Practice Profile: Postsecondary Correctional Education (PSCE) |url=https://crimesolutions.ojp.gov/ratedpractices/postsecondary-correctional-education-psce |publisher=National Institute of Justice |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> The administrative process for approving Prison Education Programs under the restored Pell eligibility involves multiple approval steps from accrediting agencies, oversight entities, and the Department of Education, which has slowed the rollout of new Pell-eligible programs.<ref name="stateline">{{cite web |title='Transformative': More college programs are slowly coming into prisons |url=https://stateline.org/2024/04/29/transformative-more-college-programs-are-slowly-coming-into-prisons/ |publisher=Stateline |date=April 29, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
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Geographic disparities also affect access. Facilities in remote locations may have fewer partnership opportunities with nearby colleges, and correspondence remains the only practical option for many students. The cost of correspondence education, while lower than traditional campus tuition, remains prohibitive for many incarcerated individuals who earn minimal wages through prison work assignments.<ref name="pef"/> Some states continue to maintain additional restrictions on state-level tuition assistance programs for incarcerated students even after federal Pell restoration.<ref name="capital-b">{{cite web |title=The Rise and Fall of Prison Education |url=https://capitalbnews.org/pell-grants-prison-education/ |publisher=Capital B |date=January 31, 2022 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref>
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[[Category:Life Inside Federal Prison]]


== References ==
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Latest revision as of 14:03, 3 June 2026

Postsecondary education in federal prison covers the range of learning available to people in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) above the high school level. The Bureau runs literacy and GED instruction at every institution. It also funds vocational training. College-level coursework is a different matter. For most of the past three decades, federal inmates who wanted a degree had to pay for correspondence courses out of their own pockets. That changed on July 1, 2023, when Pell Grant eligibility returned for incarcerated students after a ban that had stood since 1994.[1]

Overview

Education inside the BOP is organized in tiers. At the bottom is mandatory literacy work. Federal policy requires inmates who lack a high school credential to enroll in the GED program, and an inmate generally must stay in it for a set period before any waiver applies. The Bureau provides this instruction directly. It costs the inmate nothing.[2]

Vocational training sits in the middle tier. The Bureau describes its postsecondary offerings as vocational and occupational in focus. Trade certifications, apprenticeships, and skills programs are run through individual institutions and vary from one prison to the next.[2]

College sits at the top, and until recently it sat mostly outside the Bureau's budget. The BOP's own policy statement is blunt about it. Some traditional college courses are available, the agency says, but inmates are responsible for funding that coursework themselves.[2] Families often cover the bill. The return of Pell Grant money has begun to shift this, though slowly and at a small number of facilities.

Education Levels (GED, Vocational, College)

GED and literacy

The GED is the foundation. An inmate without a high school diploma is required to participate in adult literacy instruction working toward the credential. The Bureau staffs these classes at every institution and treats completion as a baseline goal of incarceration. There is no charge. Inmates who already hold a diploma or equivalency are exempt.[2]

Vocational and occupational training

Vocational programs teach a trade. The specific courses depend on the prison. A given facility might run training in carpentry, welding, electrical work, HVAC, culinary arts, or commercial driving, often tied to an industry certification an inmate can carry into the job market after release. The Bureau frames these programs as occupational preparation rather than general education.[2] Research has repeatedly tied them to better employment outcomes after release. A 2013 RAND analysis found vocational training was associated with a 28 percent higher likelihood of employment once an inmate got out.[3]

College and correspondence programs

College has long been the hardest tier to reach. Internet access is barred at most federal facilities, which rules out online coursework. That leaves print. A handful of accredited schools build their programs around the mail, shipping coursework and texts to inmates and proctoring exams through facility staff.

Adams State University in Alamosa, Colorado runs one of the larger print-based programs. It is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and offers certificates, associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and a Master of Business Administration entirely through the mail. Students get extended completion windows, up to twelve months for a single course.[4] Ohio University has offered correspondence education to incarcerated students since 1974, providing associate and bachelor's options through printed courses.[5] Other schools, including several California community colleges, enroll incarcerated students from facilities across the country.[6]

Where there is no Pell-approved program, the student or the student's family pays. Federal student loans are not available to incarcerated borrowers under any program type.[1] Some schools let an inmate pay course by course rather than all at once.[4]

Pell Grant Restoration

For nearly three decades, federal financial aid was off the table for anyone in prison. The story of how that happened, and how it was undone, runs from 1994 to 2023.

The 1994 ban

Incarcerated students could receive Pell Grants from the program's start in the 1960s through the early 1990s. That aid built a wide network of college programs behind bars. By the early 1990s, hundreds of college-in-prison programs operated across the country.[7]

The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, often called the Crime Bill, cut that off. It made every person held in a state or federal prison ineligible for a Pell Grant. The cut went through during a tough-on-crime stretch in national politics, even though aid to incarcerated students had been a small slice of the overall program.[8]

The effect was fast. Programs that had relied on Pell money to operate folded almost at once. Within a few years the number of college-in-prison programs across the country had collapsed to a small fraction of what it had been.[7] Several states pulled their own tuition aid for inmates soon after. What survived ran on private donations, volunteer teachers, and money from inmates and their families.[8]

Second Chance Pell

The first crack in the ban came in 2015. The Obama administration launched the Second Chance Pell Experimental Sites Initiative, a pilot that let a limited set of approved colleges award Pell Grants inside prisons. It started with dozens of schools and grew over the next several years to more than 160 colleges operating across most states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the federal system.[9] The pilot served as proof of concept for full restoration.

Full restoration in 2023

Congress lifted the ban for good in the FAFSA Simplification Act, which was folded into the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, and signed into law in December 2020. The repeal did not take effect immediately. It was set to begin on July 1, 2023, the start of the next award year, which is the date Pell Grants again became available to incarcerated students after the 1994 cutoff.[10]

Restoration came with a condition. An inmate cannot simply enroll anywhere and draw Pell funds. The coursework has to be part of a Prison Education Program, a PEP, approved by the Department of Education and run by a public or nonprofit school. The approval process involves the school, its accreditor, the corrections agency that runs the facility, and the Department.[1]

The first approved PEP inside the federal system came in 2024. Illinois Central College received Department of Education approval to run a program at FCI Pekin in Illinois, the first such approval at a federal facility.[11] More programs have followed at a measured pace.

How to Enroll

The path depends on what kind of program an inmate is after.

For the GED, there is little to arrange. An inmate without a high school credential is placed in literacy instruction as a matter of policy. Staff in the institution's Education Department handle placement.[2]

For vocational training, an inmate signs up through the same Education Department. Availability differs by prison, and popular trade courses can carry a waitlist. Staff can explain which programs a given facility runs.[2]

For a Pell-funded college program, the inmate has to be at a facility where an approved PEP operates. Where one exists, the institution's education staff manage enrollment and the financial aid paperwork, including the FAFSA.[1] Coverage is still limited. Most federal facilities do not yet host an approved program.[11]

For a self-funded correspondence degree, the inmate works through the facility's Education Department, often a designated College Coordinator, to get authorization. The school is paid directly by the student or the family. All contact runs by mail, since internet coursework is not allowed.[6]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can federal inmates get a college degree in prison?

Yes. Federal inmates can earn certificates and degrees through accredited correspondence programs delivered by mail, and, at a growing number of facilities, through Department of Education-approved Prison Education Programs funded by Pell Grants. Internet-based coursework is barred at most federal facilities, so college study generally happens through print.


Q: When were Pell Grants restored for incarcerated students?

Pell Grant eligibility for incarcerated students took effect on July 1, 2023. Congress repealed the 1994 ban through the FAFSA Simplification Act, which was signed into law in December 2020 as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, with the change set to begin in the 2023 award year.


Q: Why were Pell Grants banned for prisoners in the first place?

The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, known as the Crime Bill, made people in state and federal prisons ineligible for Pell Grants. The cut came during a tough-on-crime period in national politics and caused most college-in-prison programs to shut down within a few years.


Q: Does the GED program cost anything in federal prison?

No. The Bureau of Prisons provides GED and adult literacy instruction at every institution at no cost to the inmate. Inmates who lack a high school credential are required to participate in the program.


Q: What is a Prison Education Program (PEP)?

A Prison Education Program is a college program inside a prison that the U.S. Department of Education has approved to award Pell Grants. It must be run by a public or nonprofit school and cleared by the school's accreditor, the corrections agency, and the Department before students can receive federal aid.


Q: How does an inmate enroll in college in federal prison?

The inmate works through the institution's Education Department. For a Pell-funded program, the facility must host an approved PEP, and staff handle enrollment and the FAFSA. For a self-funded correspondence degree, the inmate gets authorization from the Education Department and the school is paid directly by the student or family.


Q: Are vocational programs available in federal prison?

Yes. The Bureau of Prisons runs vocational and occupational training that varies by facility, often tied to industry certifications in trades such as welding, carpentry, HVAC, and culinary work. Research has linked this training to higher employment rates after release.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Eligibility of Confined or Incarcerated Individuals to Receive Pell Grants". U.S. Department of Education. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "Education". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  3. "Evaluating the Effectiveness of Correctional Education: A Meta-Analysis of Programs That Provide Education to Incarcerated Adults". RAND Corporation. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Prison Education Program (PEP)". Adams State University. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  5. "Print-Based Degrees and Programs". Ohio University. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Prison College Programs". Zoukis Consulting Group. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "The Second Chance Pell Pilot Program: A Historical Overview". American Enterprise Institute. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Since You Asked: How did the 1994 crime bill affect prison college programs?". Prison Policy Initiative. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  9. "Second Chance Pell: Six Years of Expanding Higher Education Programs in Prisons, 2016–2022". Vera Institute of Justice. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  10. "How Pell Grant Restoration Impacts Jails". Vera Institute of Justice. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Illinois Central College Approved for First Prison Education Program Inside Federal Bureau of Prisons". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved June 3, 2026.