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Findings of Preliminary Research at Women's and Men's Correctional Facilities

NCJ Number
238295
Author(s)
Dean W. Collinwood Ph.D.
Date Published
June 2009
Length
11 pages
Annotation
This report reviews the history of the program entitled, 7 Habits of Highly Effective People ("7 Habits") as it evolved in Colorado men's and women's prison settings, with preliminary evaluation results reported from pre-tests and post-tests.
Abstract
Jerry Gasko, Director of Prisons for the State of Colorado, first learned about the 7 Habits while serving in the U.S. Army in the 1980s. In 1996, he decided to teach the 7 Habits to the prison warden and directors at the Fremont Correctional Facility. Eventually, he decided to teach the 7 Habits to the inmates. A trial run was approved for Fremont inmates in 1997. Twenty of the most hardened criminals were selected for participation in the first class, which was taught b y Chaplain Dan Matsche. After the 8-week course ended, Gasko noted that the course resulted in behavioral changes among participants; they started talking to each other instead of fighting each other, and they engaged in misconduct much less often. After a few years, inmates succeeded in developing a workbook that included sections on how to live in prison and how to get out on parole. Between 1998 and 2002, approximately 500 inmates participated in the course in a number of Colorado prisons. In 2008, Karen de Lorenzo, a 7 Habits facilitator, volunteered to teach the program at the La Vista Correctional Facility in Pueblo, CO. The program was taught to 12 women. The follow-up survey showed an overall moderate increase in the average score compared to the pre-test, and significant increases occurred on several of the individual question averages. A carefully controlled study of the impact of 7 Habits on inmates' long-term behavior has not yet been conducted; until this is done, current findings should be regarded as preliminary. 4 figures