Correctional Continuum

Soc 3361-001
Spring Semester, 2010
Instructor: Jeff Maahs
Class Time and Room: MWF, 11-11:50am, Cina 224
Office Hours: Monday/Wednesday, 9:30-10:30am, 1-1:30pm, or by Appointment
Office: 207 Cina
Mailbox: 228 Cina
Email: jmaahs@d.umn.edu
Web: www.d.umn.edu/~jmaahs
Phone: 726-7395

Course Description

Correctional Continuum is an upper division (junior/senior) class that provides students with a general overview of the United States correctional system. Corrections includes sentencing (and factors that influence sentencing), and the agencies and individuals charged with carrying out the sentence. The continuum of correctional sanctions in the United States is anchored on one end by community-based corrections (e.g., probation/parole), and on the other end by institutional corrections (prisons/jails). A host of intermediate sanctions (halfway houses, boot camps, intensive probation) fill the gap between these ends.

Objectives--students who complete this class should be able to:

Required Course Texts

Alarid, L.F. and P. L. Reichel (2006/2008). Corrections: A Contemporary Introduction. Boston: Pearson.

Latessa, E.J. and A.M. Holsinger. (2006). Correctional Contexts: Contemporary and Classical Readings. Third Edition. Los Angeles: Roxbury.

Additional Readings (Links to the .pdf files are in the syllabus calendar):
1. MacKenzie, D.L., Wilson, D., and Kider, S. (2001). "Effects of Correctional Boot Camps on Offending," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, 578: 126-143.
2. Joan Petersilia (1998). "Probation in the United States, Part II." Perspectives, 42-49.
3. Useem, B. (1985). "Disorganization and the New Mexico Prison Riot of 1980." American Sociological Review, 50: 677-688.

Special arrangements/Facilities

Individuals who have any disability, either permanent or temporary, which might affect their ability to perform in this class are encouraged to inform the instructor at the start of the semester. Adaptation of methods, materials or testing may be made as required to provide for equitable participation. It is your responsibility to contact Disability Services for advice regarding adaptations.

Academic Dishonesty(Cheating)

Cheating on exams or assignments will be dealt with in accordance with University policies. Anyone caught cheating on an exam will receive a zero for that exam. Plagiarism refers to presenting another's words or ideas as if they were your own. It is cheating and thus an academic offense. The penalty for plagiarism is failure for that particular assignment. I encourage you to work together, but you must turn in your own work. If you use ideas or words from the texts or outside readings, you must cite the work.

Attendance/Tardiness

I do not take attendance and there is no formal penalty for missing class (no points will be deducted from your score based solely on attendance). However, past experience with teaching this class suggests that a student's attendance is strongly related to his or her exam performance. Some of the material we cover is very complex, and the lectures are designed to help you organize and comprehend the readings. Further, most of the exam questions stem directly from class discussions. Since attendance is not required, I expect those who attend to pay attention, act respectfully to myself and other students, and avoid high school-type antics like passing notes or holding conversations unrelated to class.

Missed Exams:

All students are expected to take the exams on the scheduled date. If you have a legitimate excuse, you must notify me before the exam. Anyone missing an exam without prior notification will receive a zero for that exam.

Course Requirements

Exams: There will be two examinations. The exams will be essay-based. Part or all of the exam may be take-home rather than in-class.

Assignments:
To encourage critical thinking about the articles prior to class, you will be required to complete assignments based on the readings. Each assignment consists of 1 or 2 essay-type questions. The assignments are linked to this syllabus (see schedule below) and are due before class begins. Since the point of assignments is to prepare you for class, assignments that are turned in after we have discussed that particular reading will receive only partial credit. As noted below, the assignments make up 1/4 of your grade. Please see the assignment guidelines for proper format and expectations.

Group Presentation:
Towards the end of the semester, you will be responsible for a presentation (and an accompanying document) based on a issue related to corrections. We will form groups (3-4 students per group) at the beginning of the semester. Information on the presentation requirements will be forthcoming. Your topic must be approved by the instructor prior to Spring Break.

Grading Scale: (Instructor reserves right to curve final grades upward)

93-100%
A
73-76% C    
90-92%
A-
70-72% C-    
87-89%
B+
67-69% D+    
83-86%
B
60-66% D    
80-82%
B-
0-59% F    
77-79%
C+
       
Exam I
25%
Exam II
25%
Assignments
30%
Presentations
20%

 

 

Course Schedule: The schedule is tentative and subject to change based on the pace of the class or other variables. The online versions will be the most up to date.

Date Topic (Links to slides WHERE AVAILABLE) Readings / Assignments
Jan 20 W Review syllabus, class expectations None
Jan 22 F Overview of corrections Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 1
     
Jan 25 M Philosophies of corrections + ideology Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 2
Jan 27 W History of corrections Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 3
Latessa and Holsinger, pp. 5-6 & Chapter 1-3
Assignment #1 Due
Jan 29 F History II Latessa and Holsinger, Chapters 4, 6, 36
     
Feb 1 M Sentencing

Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 4
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapter 5
Assignment #2 Due

Feb 3 W Sentencing II Latessa and Holsinger, Chapter 31
Feb 5 F Jails/Detention/Pretrial release Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 8
     
Feb 8 M Probation Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 6
Feb 10 W Probation II Petersilia (1998). "Probation in the US"
Assignment #3 Due
Feb 12 F Intermediate Sanctions/Community Corrections Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 7
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapter 28
     
Feb 15 M Intermediate Sanctions II (Boot camps) MacKenzie, Wilson, and Kider (2001). "Effects of Correctional..."
Assignment #4 Due
Feb 17 W Intermediate Sanctions III (ISP) None
Feb 19 F Institutional Corrections I (Classification/Prison 101) Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 5
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapters 13 & 32
     
Feb 22 M Institutional Corrections II (Inmate Adaptation) Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 9
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapters 8-11
Assignment #5 Due
Feb 24 W Institutional Corrections III (Prison Management) Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 10
Feb 26 F Institutional Corrections IV (Prison Riots) Useem (1985). "Disorganization and the NM Prison Riot"
     
March 1 M MOVIE DAY "Shakedown at Sante Fe" (1980 NM Prison Riot)
March 3 W Review/Groups
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapters 14, 15
Assignment #6 Due
March 5 F Institutional Corrections V (Corrections Officers) None
     
March 8 M Inmate Litigation/Inmate Rights Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 13
March 10 W Inmates Rights II Latessa and Holsinger, pp. 175-177, Chapters 16-18
March 12 F Mid-term Exam Study for Mid-term
     
March 15-19 Spring Break Bulldogs gone wild
     
March 22 M Review midterm exam / Group presentation work time  
March 24 W Parole/Release I Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 12
March 26 F Parole/Release II Latessa and Holsinger, Chapters 27 & 29
Assignment #7 Due
     
March 29 M Group Presentation Work Time In class work on or research for presentation
March 31 W Corporal/Capital Punishment I Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 14
Latessa and Holsinger, Chapter 33
April 2 F Corporal/Capital Punishment II None
     
April 5 M Rehabilitation (Martinson Report + Rebuttal and Update)

Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 14 pp. 502-512
Latessa and Holsinger, pp. 225-226, Chapter 19, 20, 26
Assignment #8 Due

April 7 W Rehabilitation II Alarid and Reichel, Chapter 11
Latessa and Holsinger Chapters 22-25
April 9 F Rehabilitation III None
     
April 12 M Restorative Justice Latessa and Holsinger Chapter 35
Assignment #9 Due
April 14 W Group Presentation Work Time In class work on or research for presentation
April 16 F Prison Privatization Latessa and Holsinger Chapter 12
     
April 19 M Group Presentation Work Time In class work on or research for presentation
April 21 W Group #10 Crime in Prison/Jail (OK)
Group #2 Mentally Ill Offenders (OK)
 
April 23 F Group #8 Restorative Justice (OK)
Group #4 Prison Gangs (OK)
 
     
April 26 M Group #12 Prison/Jail Crowding (OK)
Group #6 Prison/Jail Architecture (OK)
 
April 28 W Group #11 Boot Camps (OK)
Group #1 CO Burnout (OK)
 
April 29 TH Optional Prison Tour -- Depart from Ordean Court at 8am (meet at 7:45am)  
May 30 F NO CLASS NO CLASS
     
May 3 M Group #9 Death Penalty (OK)
Group #7 Juveniles (OK)
 
May 5 W Group #5 Drug Courts (OK)
Group #3 Privatization (OK)
 
May 7 F Reveiw for Exam  
     
May 10 (Mon)) Final Exam @ 2pm Study for Final Exam