Walking out to "Pomp and Circumstance," the Class of 2026 makes history as the inaugural graduating class of PSU's Higher Education in Prison program. Six students earned their bachelor's degrees in Liberal Studies.
Dressed in her cap and gown at the podium, Sarah Martin held up her first reading assignment from her first Portland State class: "'Only Connect…' — The Goals of a Liberal Education." It was so impactful that she's held onto it for seven years.
"In this, William Cronon describes a liberal education as the aspiration to nurture the growth of human talent in the service of freedoms," she said.
That word — freedom — holds a profound meaning for Martin and her fellow graduates Melody Arreguin, Sofia De Ferrari, Cynthia Rowe, Ashley Wildfire and Sasha Zay. They represent the inaugural class of PSU's bachelor's degree program at Coffee Creek Correctional Facility, a women's prison and intake center in Wilsonville.
"When we felt incarceration took our voice away, or that we were unteachable or undeserving, PSU empowered us to connect with ourselves, our communities and our world," Martin said. "When I look out today, I see future teachers, advocates, philosophers, poets, songwriters, some legislators even, and lots of business owners, master's degrees and PhDs. So Doc Martin, here I come now."
Cheering on the graduates was a packed room of fellow students, family, friends, and more than a dozen faculty and staff who support the program at PSU.
PSU's Higher Education in Prison program began in 2019 with a single class, Metamorphosis, which both Martin and Rowe were in, and has grown to offer about five courses a term. The program celebrated a major milestone in December 2024 with its first graduate.
Students work towards a degree in Liberal Studies, an interdisciplinary major that allows students to engage with a variety of topics. Courses have spanned Black Studies, urban studies, Spanish, biology, conflict resolution, film, philosophy, women's studies, psychology, writing, math and political science.
An optional business minor is also offered, which Martin and Rowe both earned. And in a nationwide first for a prison education program, three graduates — Martin, De Ferrari and Zay — participated in the McNair Scholars program, completing an undergraduate research project under the supervision of a faculty mentor. Martin explored the impacts of incarceration on mothers and children, while De Ferrari examined media narratives of the Black Lives Matter movement through an epistemic injustice lens. Both of their papers were featured in the latest issue of the peer-reviewed PSU McNair Scholars Online Journal.