Nearly 3 million children in the US have at least one parent in prison. Family incarceration has devastating effects on kids, from raising their level of poverty to a higher risk of school dropout and emotional stress. But the data fails to capture the stigma felt by the youth who have a loved one who is in prison, let alone the sense of confusion and loss that so often comes in the wake of family incarceration.
That problem was personal for Amy Friedman, an author and prison rights activist who is also the co-founder of the school-based program called, POPS the Club. POPS stands for “pain of the prison system”. She is also the editor of the arts anthology published by POPS called Dream Catchers. Along with her husband, Dennis Danziger who is a high school teacher, she stated POPS as a single club at Venice High School in Los Angeles. Today, there are 17 POPS Clubs in five states. We spoke with Amy Friedman and asked how and why she started the POPS program. (more…)
In 2016, Dr. Monique W. Morris examined the experience of black and brown girls in school with her book “Pushout – The Criminalization of...
On this episode of The Best of Our Knowledge: Researchers are using artificial intelligence to listen in on the animal kingdom. Periodical cicadas this...
The long time president of a northern New York university is calling it quits and looking back on the changes he’s worked through. Today...