Democracy Dies in Darkness

They’re locked up in D.C. — and learning how to code from MIT

A program called Brave Behind Bars brings computer science education to the D.C. jail

September 13, 2022 at 8:00 a.m. EDT
Students from Brave Behind Bars, an introductory computer science program for incarcerated people, gather for a portrait after a graduation ceremony at the D.C. jail. (Carolyn Van Houten/The Washington Post)
5 min

The last time Rochell Crowder held an office job, he said, it was 1983 and computers were not yet central to everyday life.

But on Thursday, after almost four decades of odd jobs and crimes that landed him in and out of jail, the 57-year-old completed a computer science course taught by PhD candidates from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.