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Best Practices

  • Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?
  • Prisoners from Płock played the game…
  • Urban games as a tool for enhancing literacy skills among prisoners
  • Edukacja albo niebyt
  • Polscy edukatorzy więzienni z wizytą studyjną w Norwegii
  • Edukatorzy więźniów na kursie zawodowym
  • Warsztaty mozaikowe. Szkolenie dla edukatorów osób pozbawionych wolności
  • SOCVOC  Social Vocational Training
  • Triangle
  • Innovative Learning Approaches in Staff Training and Young Offenders’ Employability Support (ILA Employability)
  • RENYO (Re-engaging young offenders with education and learning)
  • JIVE (Justice Involving Volunteers in Europe)
  • Restorative Justice
  • Safe (Digital) Studying 
  • Produce and publish two educational books (manuals) explaining and displaying different aspects of artwork in the prison. 
  • Movable barrers
  • PriMedia.  ICT & Multimedia Tools for Prison Education
  • Education Behind Foreign Bars
  • ISO records
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2014
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2016
  • Breaking Barriers
  • GUTS project
  • Partners in Crime Prevention
  • Peeta
  • PICP Project
  • Project
  • STEP
  • STEP
  • The Chrysalis and the Butterfly

Conferences

  • A Good Neighbor
  • Title of your doc here
  • EPEA Conference 2019 in Dublin

Formal education

  • Edukacja albo niebyt
  • Enhancing social skills for prisoners
  • Education is a treasure
  • Triangle
  • Wat weet u van ……?
  • Putting Education at the heart of custody? The views of children on Education in a Young Offender Institution
  • Public awareness of correctional education carried out in juvenile correctional facilities
  • “I ain’t stupid, I just don’t like school”: a ‘needs’ based argument for children’s educational provision in custody
  • Education and training in a Scottish prison for young offenders: a desk review of inspection reports
  • The Role of Higher Education in Youth Justice: A ‘Child-First’ Approach to Diversion
  • Improving Education for Incarcerated Children and Young People: Policy Recommendations from Three Transnational Projects in Europe
  • Innovative Learning Approaches in Staff Training and Young Offenders’ Employability Support (ILA Employability)
  • RENYO (Re-engaging young offenders with education and learning)
  • Skills4Life (S4L)
  • Quem são os professores de adultos nas prisões portuguesas e como eles constroem o seu saber? [Who are the adult educators in Portuguese prisons, and how do they develop their expertise?]
  • Safe (Digital) Studying 
  • Education Behind Foreign Bars
  • European citizenship and digital competence in European prisons
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2014
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2016
  • Breaking Barriers
  • Foriner project
  • GUTS project
  • Peeta
  • STEP
  • The Chrysalis and the Butterfly
  • Valk & Uil

Interventions

  • The long term of a prison based music program
  • Can prisoners be role models?
  • RESTART Project: Restore, Rise, Impact
  • E/I-motion: Unconventional Community Networks and Learning in support of Marginalised Youth Integration
  • Mentor+ (Youth mentoring programme to prevent juvenile offending)
  • Prison and physical activities in Italy: practices and utilities for the creation of new proposals
  • Movable barrers

Literacy and Digital literacy

  • Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?
  • Prisoners from Płock played the game…
  • Urban games as a tool for enhancing literacy skills among prisoners
  • Edukatorzy więźniów na kursie zawodowym
  • Triangle
  • NOTAS SOBRE LEITURA E A QUEBRA DO CÍRCULO DE VIOLÊNCIA: A REMIÇÃO PENAL A PARTIR DA RE-LEITURA DE TEXTOS LITERÁRIOS [Notes on reading and breaking the cycle of violence: Sentence Reduction through Rereading Literary Texts]
  • Challenges to the Educational “Digital Divide” in Spanish Prisons
  • POL-COM A developmental and educational platform and gamified tools for training police officers and similar professionals in communication
  • Youth Regained
  • Safe (Digital) Studying 
  • PriMedia.  ICT & Multimedia Tools for Prison Education
  • Education Behind Foreign Bars
  • European citizenship and digital competence in European prisons
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2014
  • ALIPPE Training Course 2016
  • ART of FREEDOM
  • BLEEP: Blended learning for prisoners
  • Breaking Barriers
  • GUTS project
  • MediaWise
  • STEP
  • The Chrysalis and the Butterfly
  • Valk & Uil

Nonformal education

  • The long term of a prison based music program
  • Czy skazani powinni mieć dostęp do edukacji?
  • Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?
  • Prisoners from Płock played the game…
  • Urban games as a tool for enhancing literacy skills among prisoners
  • Edukacja albo niebyt
  • Polscy edukatorzy więzienni z wizytą studyjną w Norwegii
  • Edukatorzy więźniów na kursie zawodowym
  • Enhancing social skills for prisoners
  • Warsztaty mozaikowe. Szkolenie dla edukatorów osób pozbawionych wolności
  • Can prisoners be role models?
  • REEDU (Inclusive Approach to Inmate Social Rehabilitation and Education project)
  • ActiveGames4Change (AG4C)
  • PROMOTE – Promoting Integrated Professional Development for Prison Practitioners in Vocational Excellence for Offender Reintegration
  • PRISGRADS Mentoring Graduates into Careers in Prison
  • POL-COM A developmental and educational platform and gamified tools for training police officers and similar professionals in communication
  • HE4Her – Health Empowerment For Women involved with The Criminal Justice Sistem
  • Escape – Educational Spiritual Counseling Applications In Prison Of Europe
  • Youth Regained
  • Prota
  • ISO records

Organizations

  • A Good Neighbor
  • Education Behind Foreign Bars
  • ISO records
  • Title of your doc here
  • Dutch prison Nieuwersluis
  • Partners in Crime Prevention
  • Platform Learn for Life
  • Valk & Uil
  • Branch organizations: Europris, ICPA, EPEA, Epale
    • Movable barrers
    • Partners in Crime Prevention
  • Convermental organizations
    • Escape – Educational Spiritual Counseling Applications In Prison Of Europe
    • European citizenship and digital competence in European prisons
  • Education centers
    • Triangle
    • Skills4Life (S4L)
    • REEDU (Inclusive Approach to Inmate Social Rehabilitation and Education project)
    • Mentor+ (Youth mentoring programme to prevent juvenile offending)
    • ActiveGames4Change (AG4C)
    • Education Behind Foreign Bars
  • NGO's
    • Prisoners from Płock played the game…
    • Urban games as a tool for enhancing literacy skills among prisoners
    • Edukacja albo niebyt
    • Polscy edukatorzy więzienni z wizytą studyjną w Norwegii
    • Edukatorzy więźniów na kursie zawodowym
    • Enhancing social skills for prisoners
    • Warsztaty mozaikowe. Szkolenie dla edukatorów osób pozbawionych wolności
    • Can prisoners be role models?
    • RESTART Project: Restore, Rise, Impact
    • PICTURES – Pedagogical Inclusive Education and Training System to UpSkill Cross-Sector Practitioners Working with Emerging Adults in Correctional Systems
    • PROMOTE – Promoting Integrated Professional Development for Prison Practitioners in Vocational Excellence for Offender Reintegration
    • PRISGRADS Mentoring Graduates into Careers in Prison
    • POL-COM A developmental and educational platform and gamified tools for training police officers and similar professionals in communication
    • HE4Her – Health Empowerment For Women involved with The Criminal Justice Sistem
    • Escape – Educational Spiritual Counseling Applications In Prison Of Europe
    • Youth Regained

Prison Art

  • The long term of a prison based music program
  • Warsztaty mozaikowe. Szkolenie dla edukatorów osób pozbawionych wolności
  • Potencialidades do Cinema de Ficção Científica em Contexto de Reclusão e o seu Impacto na Construção de Comunidades de Aprendizagem [The Potential of Science Fiction Cinema in Prison Contexts and its Impact on the Development of Learning Communities]
  • Dramatic art in detention facilities in Greece. Research on the perceptions of facilitators in the prisons of Tiryntha and Nafplio
  • Produce and publish two educational books (manuals) explaining and displaying different aspects of artwork in the prison. 
  • ISO records
  • Music for Freedom
  • ART of FREEDOM
  • De Rechter
  • GUTS project
  • Pushing through detention positively.
  • Partners in Crime Prevention
  • Peeta
  • The Chrysalis and the Butterfly

Reintegration

  • Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?
  • Prisoners from Płock played the game…
  • Enhancing social skills for prisoners
  • Can prisoners be role models?
  • RESTART Project: Restore, Rise, Impact
  • Triangle
  • E/I-motion: Unconventional Community Networks and Learning in support of Marginalised Youth Integration
  • JIVE (Justice Involving Volunteers in Europe)
  • Restorative Justice
  • Escape – Educational Spiritual Counseling Applications In Prison Of Europe
  • Youth Regained
  • Safe (Digital) Studying 
  • Prota
  • BLEEP: Blended learning for prisoners
  • GUTS project
  • Peeta

Research and Publications

  • Prison education across Europe: policy, practice, politics
  • Why prisoners pursue adult education and training: Perceptions of prison instructors
  • MALCOLM KNOWLES’ THEORY OF ANDRAGOGY: IMPLICATIONS IN LIFE LONG EDUCATION
  • The Andragogy Approach: Knowles’ Adult Learning Theory Principles in 2025
  • Going to Teach in Prisons: Culture shock
  • PRISON EDUCATION CHARACTERISTICS ANDCLASSROOM MANAGEMENT BY PRISON TEACHERS
  • Czy skazani powinni mieć dostęp do edukacji?
  • A Good Neighbor
  • RESTART Project: Restore, Rise, Impact
  • Wat weet u van ……?
  • Putting Education at the heart of custody? The views of children on Education in a Young Offender Institution
  • Public awareness of correctional education carried out in juvenile correctional facilities
  • “I ain’t stupid, I just don’t like school”: a ‘needs’ based argument for children’s educational provision in custody
  • Education and training in a Scottish prison for young offenders: a desk review of inspection reports
  • The Role of Higher Education in Youth Justice: A ‘Child-First’ Approach to Diversion
  • Improving Education for Incarcerated Children and Young People: Policy Recommendations from Three Transnational Projects in Europe
  • Potencialidades do Cinema de Ficção Científica em Contexto de Reclusão e o seu Impacto na Construção de Comunidades de Aprendizagem [The Potential of Science Fiction Cinema in Prison Contexts and its Impact on the Development of Learning Communities]
  • Quem são os professores de adultos nas prisões portuguesas e como eles constroem o seu saber? [Who are the adult educators in Portuguese prisons, and how do they develop their expertise?]
  • Prison and physical activities in Italy: practices and utilities for the creation of new proposals
  • NOTAS SOBRE LEITURA E A QUEBRA DO CÍRCULO DE VIOLÊNCIA: A REMIÇÃO PENAL A PARTIR DA RE-LEITURA DE TEXTOS LITERÁRIOS [Notes on reading and breaking the cycle of violence: Sentence Reduction through Rereading Literary Texts]
  • Dramatic art in detention facilities in Greece. Research on the perceptions of facilitators in the prisons of Tiryntha and Nafplio
  • Challenges to the Educational “Digital Divide” in Spanish Prisons
  • Produce and publish two educational books (manuals) explaining and displaying different aspects of artwork in the prison. 
  • PriMedia.  ICT & Multimedia Tools for Prison Education
  • Distance Education for Dutch Citizens Detained Abroad
  • ART of FREEDOM
  • Partners in Crime Prevention
  • STEP

Scientific research

  • MALCOLM KNOWLES’ THEORY OF ANDRAGOGY: IMPLICATIONS IN LIFE LONG EDUCATION
  • The long term of a prison based music program

Vocational Training

  • MALCOLM KNOWLES’ THEORY OF ANDRAGOGY: IMPLICATIONS IN LIFE LONG EDUCATION
  • The Andragogy Approach: Knowles’ Adult Learning Theory Principles in 2025
  • Edukacja albo niebyt
  • Polscy edukatorzy więzienni z wizytą studyjną w Norwegii
  • Edukatorzy więźniów na kursie zawodowym
  • Enhancing social skills for prisoners
  • SOCVOC  Social Vocational Training
  • Triangle
  • Education and training in a Scottish prison for young offenders: a desk review of inspection reports
  • PICTURES – Pedagogical Inclusive Education and Training System to UpSkill Cross-Sector Practitioners Working with Emerging Adults in Correctional Systems
  • PROMOTE – Promoting Integrated Professional Development for Prison Practitioners in Vocational Excellence for Offender Reintegration
  • POL-COM A developmental and educational platform and gamified tools for training police officers and similar professionals in communication
  • Prota
  • PriMedia.  ICT & Multimedia Tools for Prison Education
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  • Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?

Must the Socially Excluded Be Digitally Excluded Too?

4 min read

The Benefits and Opportunities of E-Learning in Prison Isolation

Lars has been in a closed prison in Luleå since 2009. In February 2013, he decided to enroll in a course to learn how to manage personal finances. Currently, he is sitting in front of a computer, completing the fourth of five online modules. Upon his release in mid-2015, he plans to start his own business. While he’s unsure about the specific type, he hopes a subsequent career activity course will help him decide.

Bastien sits on his bunk in a cell in Nîmes prison, headphones on, listening to an Italian language lesson. He has always wanted to learn Italian to connect with distant relatives in Italy, and he dreams of visiting them someday. Though he has many years left to serve, he is determined to use this time wisely. The prison administration has made learning possible, and tomorrow he has a session with his teacher to address questions he encountered during his week of independent study.

In the Grochów Detention Center, Martyna’s teacher is helping her solve a math problem on the computer screen. She’s not yet adept at using a computer, but she’s improving daily. Martyna is a student at an e-learning high school. She resumed her education after leaving school at the primary level while free. Although her sentence won’t allow her to finish high school while incarcerated, she has decided to complete it upon release. She admits her son, soon to finish primary school himself, inspired her decision. She’s also motivated to catch up with his proficiency in technology.

These cases highlight individuals in correctional facilities who chose to spend their time learning. Each of them utilizes different technologies—Lars uses the Internet, Bastien relies on audio materials, and Martyna benefits from an e-learning platform—to support their education. This form of learning is known as “e-learning.” In this article, I aim to explore what e-learning entails, its advantages in the context of prison education, and examples of e-learning programs for inmates implemented in some European Union countries.

Education in Prisons

The renowned French writer Victor Hugo once said, “He who opens a school door, closes a prison.” This statement rings true even today. Social exclusion, whether economic, cultural, or physical, through incarceration, is one of the harshest forms of repression.

Education is a cornerstone of modern life and a vital element of rehabilitation during imprisonment, alongside opportunities for work. Socially excluded individuals, perhaps more than others, deserve access to proper education and opportunities to gain or deepen knowledge.

Poland, as a member of the European Union, adheres to EU norms, including those on prison education. One such guideline is the Council of Europe’s Recommendation No. R (89) 12, emphasizing access to comprehensive educational programs tailored to inmates’ aspirations and individual needs. Prioritized are those lacking basic literacy and numeracy skills, juveniles, and individuals with special needs. Education within the prison system is to hold equal status with work, ensuring no financial or other penalties for inmates who choose to study.

The EU estimates that over 750,000 individuals are currently incarcerated across its member states. While exact education statistics are unavailable, only about 5% of inmates are believed to qualify for higher education. Low qualifications significantly hinder post-release employment prospects, contributing to high recidivism rates. Addressing this gap through education, including vocational training, plays a crucial role in rehabilitation. However, across the EU, only about 25% of inmates participate in educational programs, often deterred by systemic or institutional barriers.

The Central Board of the Polish Prison Service reported in 2013 that the monthly cost of maintaining a single inmate was over 2,600 PLN. Investing in prison education could yield a dual return: better-qualified individuals contributing to GDP and reduced taxpayer costs for incarceration.

What is E-Learning?

If traditional education models fail to engage inmates, what alternatives might work in the context of prison isolation? Observations suggest that e-learning, offering flexibility and individualized approaches, holds significant promise.

E-learning, derived from “electronic learning,” encompasses any learning supported by electronic media. While often associated with computer-based learning, it includes a wide range of tools such as Internet platforms, intranets, satellite broadcasts, audio and video tapes, interactive television, CDs, DVDs, e-books, and podcasts.

The flexibility and variety of e-learning methods allow learners to tailor their educational experiences to their preferences and pace. This adaptability has made e-learning a standard across many institutions globally, and prisons are no exception. The closed nature of correctional facilities makes e-learning particularly suitable for inmate education.

E-learning’s advantages in prison settings include:

  • Expanded educational offerings.
  • Tailored approaches addressing individual needs.
  • Continuity of learning despite the closed environment.
  • Opportunities to acquire general, vocational, and digital skills.
  • Motivation for younger inmates.
  • Diverse formats, such as games, animations, and interactive programs.
  • Reduced stigma associated with traditional classroom settings.

Challenges include initial implementation costs, the need for self-discipline, systemic barriers to online content, and public perception issues regarding prison education.

Examples of E-Learning in European Prisons

Several European countries have implemented innovative e-learning programs:

  • Sweden: A decade-old intranet-based system allows inmates to study independently while receiving remote support from teachers. Over 150 courses are available, tailored to individual needs, ensuring continuity even when inmates are transferred.
  • Turkey: Inmates access self-study materials, such as CDs, and take exams to earn state-recognized certifications. Internet use is restricted but permitted for educational purposes with approval.
  • England: Integrated Digital TV (IDTV) provides inmates with educational content in their cells, supplemented by one-on-one mentoring sessions.
  • Germany: The “Elis” platform offers over 160 courses across various subjects, enabling controlled access to online materials and fostering communication between inmates and educators.
  • Poland: Experimental e-learning high schools in detention centers allow inmates to study under teacher supervision using digital platforms, with plans for expansion.

Open the School Doors

These examples demonstrate the potential of e-learning to transform prison education, aligning with modern rehabilitation strategies. By integrating digital tools into inmate education, we not only reduce digital exclusion but also empower individuals to reintegrate into society as skilled and responsible citizens.

Investing in e-learning for inmates benefits not only the learners but also society as a whole. If we cannot close all prisons, let us at least open the doors to education, making it an accessible and transformative resource for all.

Hubert Skrzynski

21th century skills, digital literacy, informal learning, non formal learning, publications, reintegration, research
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Updated on January 6, 2025
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