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The Insight Approach:The Four Core ProgramsThe core curriculum or cornerstone programs that drive IPP's socialization process are: Restorative Justice (Victim/Offender Education Groups), Violence Prevention, IPP Group Process, and Mind/Body Integration. The Insight Approach is designed to treat the whole person and creates a 'change of heart'. It transforms the entrenched negative habit patterns that trip up a prisoner -regardless of the academic or vocation skills they may gain in their rehabilitation process. Our methodology integrates instruction, process and practice and covers these four essential ingredients: the emotional work, the rational restructuring, the victim-impact work and the embodied integration of those new behaviors. What is unique about the Insight Approach is that it is informed by years of spending time inside the trenches of a state prison (San Quentin State Prison). It is informed by working up close and road testing it with scores of incarcerated men - all types of offenders, races, gang affiliations and ages. We have developed population specific interventions, new language and application that work effectively with a multi-ethnic, incarcerated population. The organizing principle is based on learning to establish a behavioral shift away from having a blind reaction to the ability to respond skillfully, i.e. making life-enhancing choices. We see three hundred prisoners a week and most all our programs have a waiting list. We estimate that over time we have worked intensively with between two and three thousand men. The IPP Victim-Offender Education Program we teach is currently in six other State prisons in IPP is becoming a Training Institute in order to spread what we have developed so that it may serve in other places. Training is integral to all the programs. IPP conducts professional facilitation trainings along with providing curriculum for each of these core programs and on the Insight Approach as a package of the four core programs. Victim/Offender Education Group (VOEG)Using the principles of Restorative Justice, IPP offers this voluntary, intensive 24 week training for San Quentin inmates who wish to better understand themselves and how their life experiences and decisions led them to prison, and most importantly how their crimes have impacted their victim(s), their families and their community. IPP Violence Prevention ProgramThis program is an in-depth journey into understanding violence. That journey includes studying the gender and cultural conditioning (including race and gang affiliations) that create stereotypical models of behavior which often validate the use of violence. The IPP Group Process ProgramThis program provides an in-depth group process focused on establishing positive habits where prisoners anchor their insights into durable behavior changes. The group is held in both the maximum facility and at the medium security H-Unit at the prison... Hatha YogaCultivating the "Sound Body, Sound Mind" concept as a principle of successful rehabilitation. The primary aim of Hatha Yoga is to free oneself from confusion and distress, thereby allowing the mind and body to be at peace. The class draws on the traditions of Hatha Yoga by employing postures and conscious breathing to achieve a sense of self-awareness, calmness and clarity. Other forms of exercise the prisoners engage in often strain muscles and bones.Mindful Meditation
Doing 'The Work'A group process class implementing Byron Katie's method: 'The Work'. The class is based on the premise that real freedom is not just 'the other side of the gate'- but rather, a state of mind. The class is about 'doing your work'; i.e. facing your issues with courage and honesty and finding a new way to live...The Red Road to SobrietyThis class is for Native American prisoners who want to respond to the ancient call of their traditional spirituality for sobriety in thought, word and deed... Brothers' KeepersBrothers' Keepers is for and by the prisoners themselves. This pioneering peer education program trains the prisoners into becoming crisis intervention counselors and certified rape trauma counselors. This peer counselor training program is the result of an initiative by prisoners on San Quentin's North Block in response to the suicide of a well-known and respected fellow inmate... Staying OutPreparing for life on the other side of the gate This class is a comprehensive, 12-week intensive training program that encompasses the many issues facing a parolee. Prisoners learn to become active in creating their own destiny, rather than living lives dictated by circumstances. Each week a different topic is presented, where learning is integrated through discussion and process. Participation in the program encourages honesty, and the ability to express feelings, respect differences, and practice new habits. Orale la RazaThis peer-facilitated program for Hispanic prisoners is taught in Spanish. The men are encouraged to explore deep personal and cultural issues and learn new ways of being with themselves and others in a multicultural society... Men's Recovery Issues GroupThis IPP Peer Education Class is also a 12-step group. Taught by inmate teacher Nick Rios with Volunteer Supervisor Earl Boisclair, the course is designed to help men who have never worked the 12-steps to begin the process. Substance Abuse CounselingIPP's drug and alcohol programs work with inmates recovering from addictions through in-depth group process, the 12-step model, and self-awareness practices to enable them to find and maintain the courage to recover and stay sober... Insight Garden ProgramBirthed as an IPP project, the Insight Garden Program is now sponsored by the Agape Foundation, and remains affiliated with IPP. The program is based on the belief that by nurturing plants, inmates can learn to better care for themselves, as well as their communities and the natural environment. The program also encourages personal responsibility through the practice of mindfulness.† The project provides participants an opportunity to landscape and garden enabling them to connect with their own creativity, gain a sense of accomplishment and pride in their work, and be able to leverage these skills professionally upon leaving the prison system.† In collaboration with the Insight Prison Project, we aim to encourage personal responsibility through the practice of mindfulness. Book-Sending ProgramThe purpose of this program is to send books to those incarcerated in the U.S. prison system. All books are obtained through donations from individuals and publishers. The scope of the literature distributed is varied and without doctrinal emphasis. It includes books and writings from a wide spectrum of spiritual traditions and thought, as well as poetry, recovery and self-help topics. |
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