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Committed a Crime? Good Luck Getting Into College

by Katie Nicora

   Imagine the excitement and pride of opening a college acceptance letter
   from one of the most prestigious Ivy League schools in the United
   States.

   Now imagine the defeat you'd feel when Harvard University rescinded
   that offer after finding out you had served time in jail.

   Such is the journey [1]Michelle Jones, who is both talented and a
   convicted murderer. Jones finished a 20-year sentence this summer for
   the murder of her four-year-old son, Brandon. Although given a life
   sentence, her time was reduced for showing intelligence and skill at
   research and scholarship.

   "With no internet access and a meager prison library, she led a team of
   inmates that pored through reams of photocopied documents from the
   Indiana State Archives to produce the Indiana Historical Society's best
   research project last year," reported the New York Times.

   Jones also wrote several [2]dance compositions and authored historical
   plays, one of which is slated for production at an Indianapolis
   theater, while serving her sentence.

   But when Harvard found out the details of Brandon's death, Jones,
   admitted to beating him and burying his body in the woods, her offer
   was rescinded. Instead, she enrolled at New York University, where she
   is a Ph.D. student in American studies.

   No data exists on exactly how many college students with criminal
   backgrounds are enrolled in college. But, a 2012 study from the
   [3]American Academy of Pediatrics calculated that, by age 23, nearly
   one-in-three people will have been arrested.

   Application attrition

   A survey of post-secondary institutions found that 66 percent collect
   criminal justice background information from prospective students, and
   most consider that information during the initial admissions process.

   On most applications, it starts with a simple "yes" or "no". Does the
   applicant have a criminal background? Check the "yes" box, and the
   application takes a detour.

   Nearly two-thirds of individuals with a felony criminal-offense record
   did not proceed with their application after being asked, according to
   a study of those seeking higher education at the State University of
   New York.

   When an applicant checks the box that they have a criminal background,
   they must answer subsequent questions detailing their arrest or
   conviction. The [4]2015 study from the SUNY system found 21 percent of
   applicants without a record didn't finish the admissions process.

   Checking the criminal background box, "yes" also affects a student's
   eligibility to receive financial aid. A [5]2014 study in the Journal of
   Urban Economics concluded that "for this high-risk group of students,
   eligibility for federal financial aid strongly impacts college
   investment decisions" negatively.

   Transition into society

   For the people coming straight out of prison, completing an online
   college application can feel daunting and overwhelming.

   "A lot of our guys who have done a lot of time maybe have never been
   online," said Jed Tucker, the director of Reentry at Bard Prison
   Initiative, which operates out of select New York State prisons to
   offer inmates the opportunity to earn a degree from Bard College while
   serving their sentence.

   "Our top student who's one class away from getting a bachelor's degree,
   who's never been on the internet or dealt with the bureaucracy of a big
   public institution, absolutely is in need of people who have real
   experience navigating the bureaucracy of a public university," he said.

   Tucker said the admissions office should address the needs of these
   students like any other.

   Colleges and universities often struggle with admitting previously
   incarcerated students due to [6]concerns for campus safety.

   But[7] analyses have concluded these screening questions have low
   predictive value and the research does not suggest campuses that admit
   previously incarcerated applicants have higher crime or violence rates.

   "Potentially, more than a moral issue, it's a reputation and prestige
   issue," said Judith Scott-Clayton, an associate professor of economics
   and education at Columbia University.

   Schools don't want to run the risk of bad press or the liability of
   being sued should a student with a criminal background get into trouble
   on campus.

   "Several rigorous quasi-experimental studies indicate that increasing
   education reduces crime," Scott-Clatyon wrote in an essay [8]for the
   Brookings Institute. "Thus, excluding applicants with prior convictions
   likely makes society less safe as a whole, even if it shifts some risk
   off-campus."

   Education has long been proven to reduce recidivism, or repeated crime,
   rates. The country's recidivism rate is approximately 60 percent, it
   falls to 22 percent when education is available to prison inmates.

   Campaigns such as [9]Ban the Box (BTB) aim at eliminating the criminal
   background questions from employment applications and housing
   paperwork. A parallel campaign called Beyond the Box wants to eliminate
   those questions from college applications. The goal is to make it
   easier for previously incarcerated people to get past the initial
   application process.

   Some universities have begun to change the wording on their
   applications. The [10]Common Application, used for admissions at 600
   institutions, has narrowed that question, asking specifically about
   prior felony and misdemeanor convictions. Other schools, like New York
   University, look at a student's criminal record only after initial
   admissions decisions have been made. The California University system
   doesn't ask about students' criminal backgrounds.

   According to NYU's website, they "believe these narrower questions
   better strike a balance between giving people a second chance through
   higher education and providing the University with information that may
   have a bearing on our campus' safety."

   Do you think colleges should 'ban the box?' Please share your
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References

   1. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/13/us/harvard-nyu-prison-michelle-jones.html]
   2. http://www.phoenixtheatre.org/duchess-of-stringtown
   3. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/129/1/21
   4. http://[http://communityalternatives.org/pdf/publications/BoxedOut_FullReport.pdf
   5. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0094119014000096
   6. http://[https://www.researchgate.net/publication/310018830_College_Admission_Policies_for_Ex-Offender_Students_A_Literature_Review
   7. https://www-brookings-edu.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.brookings.edu/research/thinking-beyond-the-box-the-use-of-criminal-records-in-college-admissions/amp/
   8. https://www-brookings-edu.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.brookings.edu/research/thinking-beyond-the-box-the-use-of-criminal-records-in-college-admissions/amp/
   9. http://bantheboxcampaign.org/about/#.Wd41c0yZOt8
  10. https://apnews.com/ac3da1935a224d3687bea2bb9bc8fe7e/common-application-changing-question-criminal-record