Education
in Prison: Politics or Progress |
Wednesday
17 September 1997
Speakers
Tim Anderson Justice Action, NSW Council for Civil Liberties
Bob Debus (or the Minister's delegate) Minister for
Corrective Services
Peter de Graff President, Corrective Services Teachers
Federation
The
Labor Party prior to the 1995 State election in its
Corrections Policy promised to substantially increase
and improve the delivery of Education and Training to
inmates in NSW Correctional Centres. This included a
commitment to employ permanent teachers for the first
time in corrections, in areas such as Adult Basic Education.
The recent Senate Inquiry into Education and Training
in Correctional Facilities made numerous recommendations
including, that there be a minimum acceptable level
of provision of educational delivery to inmates, that
education be a right rather than a privilege, that education
and training of offenders be a key responsibility of
corrections services, that National Standards for Education
and Training for People in Custody be developed, and
that national conferences of correctional educators
be held regularly. Will education in prisons, for inmates
who have some of the lowest literacy and numeracy rates
in our community, continue to progress, or instead become
the subject of politics?
This
seminar was jointly presented by the Institute of Criminology,
The Corrective Services Teachers Federation, and The
NSW Teachers Federation.
Conference
papers are not available |