Incarcerated Learners Need Better Records Support

June 25, 2026
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When a prison education program fails, the visible explanation is usually something at the program level: underfunding, faculty turnover, institutional indifference. But what a series of practitioner interviews conducted by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers earlier this year suggests is that the most consequential failures happen earlier and quieter—in the design stage, before a single student enrolls, when the professionals best equipped to prevent those failures were never invited to the table.

AACRAO spoke with members in February and March of 2026: registrars, admissions operations professionals and enrollment managers at institutions running prison education programs at every stage of maturity—from a program in its second semester to one that recently held its first commencement ceremony, graduating a man exonerated after 29 years of wrongful incarceration. The conversations were candid, unstructured and remarkably consistent. The same failures appeared across institution types and geographies. And the same role was absent in nearly every case.

A Structural Absence With Predictable Consequences

Prison education programs are typically built by faculty, partnerships staff, workforce coordinators or even chaplains—people whose commitment to this work is genuine and whose expertise does not include academic records governance, credit applicability or admissions and registrars. The consequences are predictable and severe.

An enrollment management professional in Texas described being brought in to manage the teach-out of a failing program. The institution had an 8 percent graduation rate. The reason: The same junior-level courses had been taught every semester, year after year. No one with curriculum-sequencing expertise had ever been involved. Students could not progress toward a credential because no one had designed a progression.

A registrar in New York described a different version of the same failure: Students kept in nonmatriculated status throughout their enrollment, accumulating 58 or, in some cases, 92 credits, then transferred to a different facility before a degree was ever conferred. The credits were earned, but the credential was never awarded and the record was never produced. This is learning that went nowhere.

“From a registrar perspective, there’s no way we would have made the types of substitutions for our general population that we were making for the prison population. From a quality perspective, that’s not the best choice.” —Registrar, Texas

These are not anomalies. They are the predictable downstream consequences of standing up programs without the professionals who manage academic records, credit applicability and enrollment policy. The incarcerated learner, unlike a traditional learner, cannot notice the problem, escalate it or work around it. The institution’s failure becomes the learner’s permanent record.

The Operational Complexity That Belongs to This Profession

The interviews raised operational challenges that have no parallel in traditional settings and are, nonetheless, problems for higher education administrators to manage.

Course design must account for facility-issued tablets running application versions that may be years behind current releases. A registrar in Utah described building an entire Excel course using current Microsoft Office, then discovering that students were working in a substitute application with a version that looked nothing like the course materials. The solution was to obtain the same tablet model students used and install the correct, older version, so any course designer could work from the learner’s actual environment.

FERPA compliance becomes structurally difficult in facilities the institution does not control. Mail containing academic information is opened by corrections staff. Verbal conversations may occur in spaces where privacy is impossible. Students are sometimes incarcerated under names different from their legal names—and in some cases, the registrar’s office is the only place in the facility that holds the student’s actual legal identity.

“Sometimes the prison education program or the registrar is the only one who has the incarcerated person’s real name. They’re locked up under a wholly different name. No one ever went back and changed it.” —Registrar, Rhode Island

Postrelease, the credit-mobility failures compound. Students with credits scattered across institutions and facilities have no unified record. Transcripts cannot be ordered electronically by students who were never set up with portal credentials. Financial aid eligibility changes at the moment of release, adding administrative complexity precisely when institutional support is least available. Credits earned inside are sometimes treated as too old by receiving institutions, despite the gap being involuntary.

Each of these failures has a familiar shape. They are the same failures that affect transfer students whose credits don’t follow them, adult learners whose prior learning goes unrecognized and stop-outs who cannot resume where they left off. PEPs concentrate these failures in the highest-stakes environment, with the least margin for error. The incarcerated learner cannot self-advocate through a portal. Cannot walk into a registrar’s office. Cannot follow up by email.

The Professionals the Field Already Has

What AACRAO members bring to this work is not specialized knowledge about correctional settings. It is the core competency of the admissions and registration professions: the expertise to design systems in which academic records are governed, credentials are awarded when earned, credit moves with the learner and FERPA is applied consistently. That expertise has not been absent from PEP design because institutions lack it. It has been absent because no one thought to ask for it.

As more prison education programs launch across the country, AACRAO has released resources to ensure registrars and admissions professionals have the tools they need: a national PEP memorandum of understanding template, updated FERPA guidance addressing redisclosure questions specific to correctional contexts and registrar-facing implementation tools. A practitioner community is also growing to support peer-to-peer learning across institutions.

What the Field Needs to Do Differently

The argument is not complicated. Institutions that want to run prison education programs that produce credentials, maintain records and serve learners through release and re-entry need to involve admissions operations and registrar professionals from the beginning—not bring them in after a program is running to sort out what went wrong, but ensure they are present in the design.

That is a structural change, and it requires a cultural one alongside it: an understanding, across institutional leadership and faculty, that admissions and registrar expertise is not an administrative afterthought in this work. It is the infrastructure the work depends on.

Learn more about AACRAO PEP resources here.



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