View as JSON
Penn State Brandywine students, inmates learn side-by-side with Inside Out program - MediaPANow

PENN STATE BRANDYWINE

Penn State Brandywine students, inmates learn side-by-side with Inside Out program

The campus offers a course within the walls of the county jail.

Warden David Mascellino addressed students at a Dec. 2 Inside Out program celebration. (Image courtesy of PSU Brandywine)

The campus offers a course within the walls of the county jail.

  • Schools

Let’s face it. There are few people in this world that truly enjoy public speaking. It can be intimidating to get up in front of any sized group of people and have to speak. Some have actual nightmares about the concept.

At Penn State Brandywine, a satellite campus of Pennsylvania State University located in Media, offers a course to ease just this sort of panic. Its semester-long course provides opportunities not only to learn techniques for public speaking, but to practice the lessons with hands-on experience. 

This year’s course included 20 total students, and the class make-up may surprise you. In addition to ten students of Penn State Brandywine, 10 incarcerated county jailed inmates also joined in on the lessons.

The college’s Christina Billie wrote about the experience on the University’s website. She said the students “overcame their apprehensions, challenged their ideas about the criminal justice system, and studied public speaking” together. The program, dubbed “the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program,” gave students the opportunity to meet each Tuesday evening during the fall semester within the walls of the Delaware County’s George W. Hill Correctional Facility

The course’s success was celebrated with a closing ceremony on Dec. 2.

“The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program is an educational program that facilitates dialogue across differences, bringing together campus-based, or ‘outside,’ students with incarcerated, or ‘inside,’ students,” explained Billie. “The George W. Hill Correctional Facility houses people who either have been accused of a crime and are awaiting a court hearing or have received a sentence of less than two years, typically for a relatively minor, nonviolent crime.”


The following on the program is compiled by Billie:

Brandywine Associate Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences Angela Putman taught the course, CAS 100A: Effective Speech. She had contacted former Warden Laura K. Williams and Kelly Shaw, reentry and program administrator, four years ago about offering the course at the correctional facility. The fall 2025 semester was the fourth time the course was administered at the facility.

Among the guests attending the ceremony were Chief Academic Officer Jen Nesbitt, Director of Campus Development Patton Vo, Advising Specialist Amy Yarlett, Delaware County Councilman Kevin Madden, as well as Warden David Mascellino and Shaw.

“There was something special about this class right from the very first night when we had our ice breaker activities. Any uncertainties, nervousness or barriers that you all had went away immediately and the joy, laughter and raucous nature of this group was palpable, and let me tell you, it stayed that way all semester,” said Putman. “I’m so incredibly grateful that you allowed me to be a part of this moment in your lives, and I hope that each of you knows that you’ve made a big impact on mine. I cannot wait to see what new moments happen for each of you in the coming years, if I should be so lucky to find out about them.”

Mascellino noted the Inside Out program is one of the most meaningful and powerful opportunities that is offered at the correctional facility.

“The Inside Out program represents one of the most meaningful opportunities we offer here at George W. Hill. It’s a space where incarcerated individuals and college students come together as equals to learn, to challenge themselves and to discover new perspectives about the world and each other,” he said.

“To our graduates, I want to start by saying how proud I am of each of you. You made a deliberate, intentional choice to invest your mind, future and sense of self. You didn’t just show up; you showed up with purpose.”

Shaw expressed gratitude to Putman for running the program and for how she positively impacted the incarcerated students.

“Dr. P, your commitment and passion for equal opportunity education ignited the inside students to want more while giving them a platform to excel and be heard,” she said. “Most importantly, you created a weekly, three-hour space for us to escape the unpleasantness of incarceration, reminding us of our potential while believing in the future. Every inside or outside student needs a reminder of all they have to offer in the world.”

After two students shared their class presentations — one inside student discussed murder in high-poverty areas and an outside student discussed child abuse and maltreatment — two other students shared their thoughts on the Inside-Out Program.

Joseph, an inside student selected by the outside students to share his reflections, talked about how the program gave him a new perspective on his life in the correctional facility.

“As an individual on the inside, I can attest to the impact the Inside Out program had on me. Not only did I get to learn how to speak publicly, but I also got the chance to get out of the housing unit and get out of an antisocial state of mind,” he said.

“It got me out of the shell I cocooned myself into to protect myself from the hostility and negligence that lives outside that door," he added. "From drilling me to increase my eye contact to advancing our vocal values, the Inside Out program empowered us to respond intelligently to others rather than react irrationally.”

Marianna, a second-year student at Penn State Brandywine, was selected by the inside students to share her reflections.

“I’m very glad Dr. P asked us what expectations we had going into this. I personally didn’t have any because that kind of sets a very unrealistic standard, but I know that a lot of my classmates felt as if there was a very rare opportunity that allowed them to venture into areas they had never experienced before,” she said.

“For the inside students, I know it was scary for them because they didn’t know how we were going to perceive them based on the stigmas of being incarcerated. They didn’t know if we were going to judge them or if we had any negative attitudes," Marianna added. "However, it’s great that we ended up finding so much normalcy out of this in the ways we were able to connect and interact. We were very sensical and humorous and ended up creating so many friends out of this experience.”


author

Melissa S. Finley

Melissa is a 27-year veteran journalist who has worked for a wide variety of publications over her enjoyable career. A summa cum laude graduate of Penn State University’s College of Communications (We are!) with a degree in journalism, Finley is a single mother to two teens, and her "baby" a chi named The Mighty Quinn. She enjoys bringing news to readers far and wide on a variety of topics.

FROM OUR PARTNERS



STEWARTVILLE

LATEST NEWS

JERSEY SHORE WEEKEND

Events

February

S M T W T F S
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28

To Submit an Event Sign in first

Today's Events

No calendar events have been scheduled for today.