Kunlyna Tauch
Storyteller, Empowerment Avenue
This article was originally published in 鈥 a partnership of聽Slate,聽国产视频, and聽Arizona State University 鈥 on December 13, 2023, as part of their series on how technology is changing prison. It was produced in partnership with .
A professor is attempting to teach 24 of us how to log in to Canvas, a learning management system many universities use to collect student work. She says something about saving our homework to the student cloud, but I鈥檓 not paying attention. I鈥檓 lost in my obsession with learning what these laptops are actually capable of. I open all the apps 鈥 Microsoft Excel, Word, PowerPoint. And then, momentarily, I freeze: Google Chrome. I open the app and am immediately let down, realizing I can access only a few URLs preapproved by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Still, the gates are ajar, and it feels like freedom 鈥 or at least a road there.
This is the first time I鈥檝e ever had a laptop. I鈥檓 currently enrolled in one of the first bachelor鈥檚 degree programs inside California prisons. The program is offered by California State University, Los Angeles, and the laptop is one of its perks. The students in my cohort 鈥 the program鈥檚 third, but the first to receive personal laptops 鈥 were all incarcerated at very young ages and sentenced to prison terms that reflect football scores. I鈥檝e served 17 years of a 50-year-to-life sentence, and none of us foresaw living past our 18th birthdays, let alone attending university. But here we are, in our senior year of a communication studies degree.
On the day I got my laptop, I returned to the housing unit skipping and giddy. I entered my cell with a Kool-Aid smile, excited to show my new Dell computer to my cellie, who had been in the second cohort of the college program. 鈥淗ow the hell are we in prison and you got a whole laptop in the cell right now!?鈥 he exclaimed. When he was working on his degree, he remembered, he had to pay people who had access to a computer at their jobs to type up his homework.
As Cal State students, we attend three hours of classes three or four times a week. Most of our homework is done on our loaner laptops and submitted through Canvas, which can be accessed only through Wi-Fi. The Wi-Fi, in turn, can be accessed only in the education department or the day room area of our housing unit.
As a result, the day room has turned into what I like to think of as a prison coffee shop. There, my fellow students and I work together on our laptops, sipping coffee out of our 鈥渉ard-time鈥 mugs 鈥 large, clear plastic cups with black handles that will be familiar to anyone who鈥檚 served time.
When I work on this borrowed computer in the day room, I can see a future, one I鈥檝e never seen before.
Sip, clack; sip-sip, clack-clack. The sound of the keyboards typing in unison is like a symphony. The temperature inside the day room is a lot cooler than the blistering desert heat. Fourteen students huddle around tables, focused on classwork. We鈥檙e still surrounded by cell doors, huge blocks of metal that boom when they shut. There鈥檚 still a watchtower overlooking everything that we do. But it feels a lot less tense here, almost as if prison has melted away. Almost as if we鈥檙e in a Starbucks on a busy afternoon.
When I wake up in the morning, I open my laptop, log in, and see if there are any聽announcements from my professors. I check my agenda for upcoming assignments. I made a little book bag from some fabric I found lying around, and I use it to carry my laptop everywhere, including to my job at the prison program office. When little pockets of time present themselves, I鈥檒l try to knock out any work I have pending. The way I see it, one day I鈥檒l be out in society, and I鈥檒l need to be able to work on things during the in-between moments. Here, I鈥檓 practicing for that.
After work, usually on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, I鈥檒l rush home, quickly shower, scarf down a sandwich, and go straight to the education department for my weekly classes. In class, my laptop stays open, ready to take notes while the professors are lecturing. On nights that I鈥檓 not in college, I teach self-help classes 鈥 focused mostly on getting people to reflect on the impact of their crimes or express themselves through storytelling. My laptop comes with me, and I teach from the lesson plans I鈥檝e prepared on it. The correctional officers know that these devices are for college use only, but they鈥檝e gotten so used to seeing me carrying my laptop around that they no longer question why I have it with me. They know that it鈥檚 my own teacher鈥檚 aide.
I was incarcerated at 18, and I鈥檓 now 35. Before prison, I had to go to the public library or different community centers to use a computer. The dial-up modems screamed at anyone who wanted to surf the net, but surfing was more like sitting in the water with some floaties and a pool noodle compared to today鈥檚 internet. I got on MySpace, and that was the extent of my computer knowledge.
When I received my prison loaner laptop, I was a technological dinosaur. But I cared for it obsessively. I would wipe the dust off it daily and place it on the corner of a table in my cell, where it would sit and charge. It made my cell a professional office space.
At first, the learning curve was steep. I was double-posting assignments on discussion boards; I preferred hard copies and would complain about navigating digital books. The mouse was too sensitive, often closing windows, deleting work, and dragging documents against my will. Initially, I wrote all of my homework by hand, then transcribed it into the computer. It took about two semesters for me to get up to speed.
These days, I prefer reading digital textbooks because I can find keywords using Ctrl+F to complete my research papers. I move paragraphs around with copy and paste while I鈥檓 editing drafts. I save my teachers鈥 PowerPoint presentations to look back on key points. After a year and a half with my laptop, I now type 40 words a minute, and can do so without the hunting-and-pecking method I once employed. I鈥檓 proud of my typing ability because it鈥檚 something I can take with me when I鈥檓 released one day, along with the degree in communication that I鈥檒l eventually have.
With these new skills, I鈥檝e also grown a sort of attachment to my laptop. I鈥檝e covered the front with stickers 鈥 Vans, SPY glasses, Paws for Life K9 Rescue 鈥 and it stores my essays for class, the canteen list I type up on Excel, and the different story ideas I pitch to editors. I feel a sort of kinship to it because of how it鈥檚 helped me grow. My laptop is a privilege that I know few incarcerated students have.
Sometimes, I walk out into the day room and sit at an available table to do my assignments. I set up my laptop, my MP3 player in my ears and my textbook in front of me. Sitting next to me is my cup of coffee. It鈥檚 a table for productivity. There, I鈥檓 the CEO of my education, my work, and my life, and I鈥檓 busy changing their course.
People walk by and ask me what it鈥檚 like to have a laptop; they sit with me and ask聽about their college credits and talk about their aspirations to get into Cal State LA. It鈥檚 a conversation I invite, and in an odd way, it鈥檚 a reminder of the possibilities and opportunity that this place has.
When I work on this borrowed computer in the day room, I can see a future, one I鈥檝e never seen before, where I鈥檓 out there, in a coffee shop, working on a laptop of my own.