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Prison Program Aims to Get Teens to Avoid a Life of Crime
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<blockquote data-quote="Butchi" data-source="post: 98592" data-attributes="member: 7"><p><strong><p style="text-align: center"><span style="font-size: 15px">Prison Program Aims to Get Teens to Avoid a Life of Crime</span></p><p></strong></p><p>[MP3]https://server1.vnkienthuc.com/files/3/Media/se-ed-teens-learn-from-prisoners-11-nov-10.mp3[/MP3]</p><p>This is the VOA Special English Education Report.</p><p></p><p>A program in the [A]eastern[/A] United States invites young people into a prison to try to scare them away from prison. The goal is to teach them to avoid bad [A]choices[/A] and bad [A]influences[/A] that could put them behind bars for life.</p><p></p><p>Students can take a tour of the prison, in school groups or by themselves. At the end, the young people sit down for a discussion with some of the [A]inmates[/A].</p><p></p><p>The program is called Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy, or PATT. It takes place at the Maryland Correctional Institution-Hagerstown, a medium-security prison for men. Sal Mauriello is a case [A]specialist[/A] there.</p><p></p><p>SAL MAURIELLO: "We have a group of eleven inmates who are in the PATT [A]program[/A]. They tell the youth what they went through as a child, what their crimes consist of. They try to teach them about peer [A]pressure[/A]. They try to teach them about bad choices."</p><p></p><p>The Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program also [A]includes[/A] an essay-writing contest.</p><p></p><p>Tomi Dare is a seventeen-year-old student at Hagerstown Community College. She saw an [A]announcement[/A] for the contest on her college website. To enter, students had to write about peer pressure and why they do not do drugs. The prize: five hundred [A]dollars[/A] for school.</p><p></p><p>In her essay, Ms. Dare wrote about her own experience growing up as an African-American girl [A]interested[/A] in sports.</p><p></p><p>TOMI DARE: "Drugs and [A]alcohol[/A] not only slow a person down, it doesn't make you feel like you are a winner. It doesn't make you feel like you are the best. As an athlete, I'm 6-2 [188 centimeters], so I feel that I should be above peer [A]pressure[/A] because I'm bigger than everybody that I'm around.</p><p></p><p>"So I was talking about that and I was talking about how I [A]consider[/A] myself a queen. And if I'm royalty, I need to not put substances in my body. Drugs and alcohol are not what a queen should be taking."</p><p></p><p>The scholarship is [A]presented[/A] by the Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program.</p><p></p><p>Prison spokesman Mark Vernarelli says most teens who visit come to [A]understand[/A] what even one bad decision can mean.</p><p></p><p>MARK VERNARELLI: "A lot of men and women serving life in prison in the state of Maryland didn't pull a trigger or [A]plunge[/A] a knife into anybody. They were accessories to a crime. They drove the getaway car. They were with the perpetrator who did the main part of the crime. And yet they got the life [A]sentence[/A] as well. "</p><p></p><p>Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy began in nineteen eighty-eight. PATT is one of Maryland's oldest programs to keep young people from a life of [A]crime[/A]. But there are also others.</p><p></p><p>MARK VERNARELLI: "We found that girls really need special sit-down sessions sometimes more than the boys do, so we have a program for girls only. We have a program that travels [A]across[/A] the state, which talks about the dangers of gang [A]affiliation[/A].</p><p></p><p>"We have an [A]excellent[/A] program where the inmates actually lead a tour and they have the children eat the meal in the prison [A]cafeteria[/A] with the inmates."</p><p></p><p>Mark Vernarelli says the Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy also gain from the program. It offers them a chance to help repay [A]society[/A] for their crimes, and keep others from following in their [A]footsteps[/A].</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Butchi, post: 98592, member: 7"] [B][CENTER][SIZE="4"]Prison Program Aims to Get Teens to Avoid a Life of Crime[/SIZE][/CENTER][/B] [MP3]https://server1.vnkienthuc.com/files/3/Media/se-ed-teens-learn-from-prisoners-11-nov-10.mp3[/MP3] This is the VOA Special English Education Report. A program in the [A]eastern[/A] United States invites young people into a prison to try to scare them away from prison. The goal is to teach them to avoid bad [A]choices[/A] and bad [A]influences[/A] that could put them behind bars for life. Students can take a tour of the prison, in school groups or by themselves. At the end, the young people sit down for a discussion with some of the [A]inmates[/A]. The program is called Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy, or PATT. It takes place at the Maryland Correctional Institution-Hagerstown, a medium-security prison for men. Sal Mauriello is a case [A]specialist[/A] there. SAL MAURIELLO: "We have a group of eleven inmates who are in the PATT [A]program[/A]. They tell the youth what they went through as a child, what their crimes consist of. They try to teach them about peer [A]pressure[/A]. They try to teach them about bad choices." The Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program also [A]includes[/A] an essay-writing contest. Tomi Dare is a seventeen-year-old student at Hagerstown Community College. She saw an [A]announcement[/A] for the contest on her college website. To enter, students had to write about peer pressure and why they do not do drugs. The prize: five hundred [A]dollars[/A] for school. In her essay, Ms. Dare wrote about her own experience growing up as an African-American girl [A]interested[/A] in sports. TOMI DARE: "Drugs and [A]alcohol[/A] not only slow a person down, it doesn't make you feel like you are a winner. It doesn't make you feel like you are the best. As an athlete, I'm 6-2 [188 centimeters], so I feel that I should be above peer [A]pressure[/A] because I'm bigger than everybody that I'm around. "So I was talking about that and I was talking about how I [A]consider[/A] myself a queen. And if I'm royalty, I need to not put substances in my body. Drugs and alcohol are not what a queen should be taking." The scholarship is [A]presented[/A] by the Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program. Prison spokesman Mark Vernarelli says most teens who visit come to [A]understand[/A] what even one bad decision can mean. MARK VERNARELLI: "A lot of men and women serving life in prison in the state of Maryland didn't pull a trigger or [A]plunge[/A] a knife into anybody. They were accessories to a crime. They drove the getaway car. They were with the perpetrator who did the main part of the crime. And yet they got the life [A]sentence[/A] as well. " Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy began in nineteen eighty-eight. PATT is one of Maryland's oldest programs to keep young people from a life of [A]crime[/A]. But there are also others. MARK VERNARELLI: "We found that girls really need special sit-down sessions sometimes more than the boys do, so we have a program for girls only. We have a program that travels [A]across[/A] the state, which talks about the dangers of gang [A]affiliation[/A]. "We have an [A]excellent[/A] program where the inmates actually lead a tour and they have the children eat the meal in the prison [A]cafeteria[/A] with the inmates." Mark Vernarelli says the Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy also gain from the program. It offers them a chance to help repay [A]society[/A] for their crimes, and keep others from following in their [A]footsteps[/A]. [/QUOTE]
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Prison Program Aims to Get Teens to Avoid a Life of Crime
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