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Rehabilitation / Correctional Program Design and Structure

Prison Program Structure Models: Cohorts, Tiers, Mentorship Pipelines, and Outcomes from Leading U.S. Correctional Programs

48 Data Points 13 Sources 24 Entities Research Date: Mar 23, 2026
This GPS research compilation analyzes prison mentorship and rehabilitation program structures across the United States, cataloging cohort models, phase/tier systems, mentor development pipelines, and assessment frameworks. Key findings include that intensive cohort-based programs (PEP, RSVP, BPI, Defy Ventures) demonstrate dramatically lower recidivism rates than national averages, with RSVP showing up to 80% reduction in violent rearrests and BPI achieving under 4% recidivism. The document maps Georgia DOC's existing programming infrastructure (12 reentry centers, 2,344 beds, O.U.T. program) and identifies structural models that could inform GPS's rehabilitation vision, emphasizing peer-to-mentor pipelines, administration partnerships, and measurement beyond recidivism.
6,000 PEP annual program reach across TDCJ units
80 PEP operates across 80 TDCJ units
400 BPI enrollment across NY prisons
44 RSVP dedicated housing unit size
50 RSVP program intensity: 50 hours per week
80% RSVP violent rearrest reduction

All Data Points

48 verified data points extracted from primary sources.

PEP annual program reach across TDCJ units Statistic
Over 6,000 men across 80 TDCJ units are invited annually to participate in PEP's fixed cohort program.
6,000 men invited annually
reentry program
PEP operates across 80 TDCJ units Statistic
PEP's Leadership and Accountability Curriculum distance-education screening reaches 80 TDCJ units.
80 TDCJ units
facilities program
BPI enrollment across NY prisons Statistic
Bard Prison Initiative has 400 students enrolled full-time across seven New York prisons.
400 students
program facilities
RSVP dedicated housing unit size Statistic
RSVP operates with 44 inmates in one dedicated housing unit in San Francisco, using a hybrid revolving model where longer-tenured participants mentor incoming participants.
44 inmates
program facilities
RSVP program intensity: 50 hours per week Statistic
RSVP operates at 50 hours per week intensity (10 hours/day, 5 days/week) for a minimum of 4 months.
50 hours per week
program
RSVP violent rearrest reduction Statistic
RSVP achieved up to 80% reduction in violent rearrests among program participants.
80%
violence reentry program
PEP total graduates since founding Statistic
PEP has graduated over 3,500 participants since its founding in 2004.
3,500 graduates
reentry program
PEP staff are 90% program graduates Statistic
90% of PEP staff are program graduates, representing a full participant-to-employee servant leadership pipeline.
90%
staffing program reentry
PEP class size and volunteer ratio Statistic
PEP operates with 128 participants per class and 211 servant volunteers (executives, CEOs, MBAs).
128 participants per class vs. servant volunteers per class
program
Defy Ventures employment rate within 6 months Statistic
85% of Defy Ventures participants are employed within 6 months of release.
85%
reentry program
Defy Ventures one-year recidivism rate Statistic
Defy Ventures reports less than 10% one-year recidivism compared to 40%+ national average.
10% vs. national average recidivism (percent, more than)
reentry program
BPI recidivism rate under 4% Statistic
Bard Prison Initiative reports a recidivism rate under 4% among its graduates.
4%
reentry program
Friends of Island Academy serves 1,000+ youth annually Statistic
Friends of Island Academy / Youth Justice Network serves over 1,000 justice-involved young people annually with a comprehensive intake-through-reentry system.
1,000 young people annually (over)
reentry program
Youth Justice Network student-teacher ratio Statistic
Friends of Island Academy / Youth Justice Network operates with a 9:1 student-teacher ratio.
9 students per teacher
program staffing
Youth Reentry Network pilot contract value Statistic
Friends of Island Academy / Youth Justice Network received an $11.5 million pilot contract for a city-wide Youth Reentry Network in NYC.
$11.5M
reentry program budget
ITM credible messenger course completion rate Statistic
The Institute for Transformative Mentoring semester-long college course for credible messengers achieved a 97.7% completion rate, with 75% of participants earning A grades.
97.7% vs. percent earning A grades
program reentry
Advance Peace model monthly stipend Statistic
The Advance Peace model provides approximately $1,000/month stipend during 18-month mentoring engagements.
$1,000
program budget
Credible messenger mentors reduce convictions by 57% Statistic
Young people with credible messenger mentors experienced a 57% decrease in convictions.
57%
reentry program violence
Georgia DOC reentry center capacity Statistic
Georgia DOC operates 12 Reentry/Cognitive Programming Centers with 2,344 beds total, of which 346 are designated for women.
2,344 beds vs. beds for women
facilities reentry program demographics
Georgia O.U.T. program duration Policy
Georgia's Offenders Under Transition (O.U.T.) program is a 200-hour cognitive-behavioral therapy program delivered in 3 modules.
program reentry mental_health
Vera Restoring Promise scale Statistic
Vera Institute's Restoring Promise initiative has established 9 dedicated housing units in 6 states since 2016, pairing adults 25+ as mentors with young adults 18-25.
9 dedicated housing units vs. states
program facilities
Hope for Prisoners volunteer mentors Statistic
Hope for Prisoners has over 200 volunteer mentors and 125+ Las Vegas police participating in its mentornship model.
200 volunteer mentors (over) vs. Las Vegas police participating (over)
program reentry
Prison program attrition rates Statistic
Attrition rates for prison programs range from 20% for prison-based adult programs to 60% for inpatient juvenile programs.
20% vs. percent attrition (inpatient juvenile)
program
OMCP certification requirements Policy
CDCR's Offender Mentor Certification Program requires approximately 1 year of coursework, a state certification exam, 255 hours of practicum, and 2,000+ supervised hours for participants to earn California State-recognized AOD Counselor certificatio…
program policy
OMCP eligibility requirements Policy
CDCR OMCP requires 5+ years remaining on sentence, 2+ years clean disciplinary record, and 9th-grade minimum education level.
program policy
Defy Ventures curriculum volume Statistic
Defy Ventures' CEO of Your New Life program requires completion of 1,200 pages of curriculum over 7 months, culminating in a Shark Tank-style pitch competition.
1,200 pages of curriculum
program
PEP in-prison assessment requirements Policy
PEP's in-prison Mini-MBA phase requires completion of 40+ exams, 200+ pitches, and a 30-minute oral presentation over 4 months.
program
Defy Ventures operates in 8 states Statistic
Defy Ventures operates across 8 states with its headquarters in Los Angeles.
8 states
program
BPI offers accredited degrees including pilot MA Policy
Bard Prison Initiative offers full accredited Bard College degrees at three levels: Associate (AA), Bachelor's (BA), and a pilot Master's (MA) program at Eastern NY Correctional Facility.
program
Cohort model preferred for intensive transformation Finding
Most successful prison programs use a cohort model rather than rolling enrollment. Cohorts create peer accountability, shared identity, and allow structured progression through curriculum phases. Rolling enrollment works for ongoing support and peer…
program
High-risk individuals need intensive multimodal services Finding
Best practice indicates that high-risk individuals need multimodal, longer-term, intensive services, while low-risk individuals need minimal exposure.
program policy
Mentor pipeline requires minimum 6-18 months Finding
Across all reviewed programs, the common pattern is that mentor development takes a minimum of 6-18 months, requires demonstrated behavioral change and competency, and ranges from formally certified (OMCP) to organic (RSVP) models.
program
Administration partnership critical for sustainability Finding
Programs that work WITH corrections administration show the greatest sustainability. RSVP partners with SF Sheriff's Department, PEP has TDCJ transferring participants to PEP-specific units, BPI operates across 7 facilities with full cooperation, OM…
program policy operations
Defy Ventures uses identity-affirming language Finding
Defy Ventures deliberately uses the term 'Entrepreneurs-in-Training' (EITs) rather than 'inmates' as part of its identity transformation approach. Language and identity shifts are identified as a key success factor.
program
Ready4Reentry is SAMHSA-funded peer mentor training Policy
Georgia's Ready4Reentry Forensic Peer Mentor Training program is funded by SAMHSA, established in 2018.
program reentry mental_health budget
Central Georgia Technical College operates in 13 facilities Statistic
Central Georgia Technical College operates Transitional Career Centers (TCCs) in 13 Georgia correctional facilities.
13 facilities
program facilities reentry
Georgia reentry centers offer approximately 6-month work release Policy
Georgia's 12 Reentry Centers provide approximately 6 months of work release programming.
reentry program policy
Correctional Program Checklist as quality assessment tool Finding
The Correctional Program Checklist (CPC) evaluates evidence-based delivery, risk targeting, criminogenic needs, CBT approaches, staff qualifications, and outcome tracking. High-scoring programs are significantly more likely to reduce recidivism.
program policy
Five best practices for dropout management Finding
Best practices for managing program attrition include: (1) allowing re-entry after failure, (2) early intervention for attrition risks, (3) program quality audits via Correctional Program Checklist, (4) incentive systems for adherence, and (5) peer …
program policy
Hope for Prisoners mentornship timeline Policy
Hope for Prisoners uses a 3-phase mentornship model: week-long intensive workshop cohort, then 18 months of individualized mentoring as client, then 6-month mentornship training to become a volunteer mentor.
program reentry
ITM provides 3 college credits at The New School Policy
The Institute for Transformative Mentoring's semester-long credible messenger course at The New School earns participants 3 college credits.
program reentry
PEP founded in 2004 Case detail
The Prison Entrepreneurship Program was founded in 2004 and has since graduated over 3,500 participants.
program
PEP certified by Baylor University Finding
PEP's in-prison Mini-MBA program is certified by Baylor University.
program
BPI established Consortium for Liberal Arts in Prison Finding
Bard Prison Initiative established the Consortium for Liberal Arts in Prison to expand the model of college-in-prison education.
program
12 risk-need assessment domains for correctional programming Methodology note
Correctional programming assessment identifies 12 risk-need domains: Anger/Hostility, Antisocial Peers, Cognitions, Education, Family/Parenting, Finance/Poverty, Medical, Mental Health, Recreation/Leisure, Substance Use, Trauma, and Work.
program mental_health policy
CERQ assessment tool has 64 items across 9 strategies Methodology note
The Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ) is a pre/post assessment tool with 64 items measuring 9 cognitive emotion regulation strategies.
program mental_health
From Prison Cells to PhD mentoring structure Policy
From Prison Cells to PhD uses formerly incarcerated college graduates as mentors with 8 core competencies measured across 2+ years of mentoring, with weekend sessions plus weekly mentoring over 12 months.
program reentry
RSVP uses ManAlive Violence Intervention Program Finding
RSVP's program is founded on the ManAlive Violence Intervention Program methodology.
program violence

Sources

13 cited sources backing this research.

Secondary Official report
AEI Report on PEP
American Enterprise Institute
Primary Academic
Bard Prison Initiative / PubMed Central
Primary Official report
Central GA Tech Reentry
Central Georgia Technical College
Secondary Official report
Credible Messenger Justice Center
Secondary Journalism
Defy Ventures / Fortune (Feb 1, 2026)
Primary Official report
GDC Reentry & Cognitive Programming
Georgia Department of Corrections
Tertiary Gps original
GPS Research Compilation: Prison Mentorship Program Structure Models
Georgia Prisoners Speak (Mar 19, 2026)
Primary Official report
Georgia Department of Community Supervision
Primary Official report
Center for New York City Affairs at The New School
Primary Official report
Prison Entrepreneurship Program / ICIC
Primary Official report
Georgia Mental Health Consumer Network (Jan 1, 2018)
Secondary Academic
Restorative Justice / Community Works West / PubMed
Primary Official report
Youth Justice Network

Key Entities

Organizations, people, facilities, and other named entities referenced in this research.

Advance Peace [program]
Bard Prison Initiative [program]
Baylor University [organization]
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation [organization]
Central Georgia Technical College [organization]
Consortium for Liberal Arts in Prison [organization]
Credible Messenger Programs [program]
Defy Ventures [program]
Eastern NY Correctional Facility [facility]
Friends of Island Academy [organization]
From Prison Cells to PhD [program]
GDC [organization]
Georgia Prisoners Speak [organization]
Hope for Prisoners [program]
Institute for Transformative Mentoring [program]
ManAlive Violence Intervention Program [program]
Offender Mentor Certification Program [program]
Offenders Under Transition [program]
Prison Entrepreneurship Program [program]
Resolve to Stop the Violence Project [program]
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration [organization]
Texas Department of Criminal Justice [organization]
The New School [organization]
Vera Institute of Justice [organization]
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