19 editors: howie brick laura Berman contributing editor: mary long inside: Sunday magazine page four-books page five-ehris christian page six-week in review Number 11 Page Three Novembe FEATUR r 17, 1974 IES 'Positive peer culture' in a reform schook Benign or oppressive? At nearby Maxey Boys Training School, administrators start with a concept of 'positive values' and'negative values' and then run a behavior modification program to instill the for- mer and suppress the latter. By STEPHEN HERSH HANK'S HAIR IS DARK, straight, roughly hewn, and shoulder length. He's short and skinny and wears a big, floppy blue hat. A wispy shadow of a moustache is just beginning to appear above his lip. He's 15 years old. He tilts his package of Marl- boros, letting one fall into his hand. For a juvenile delinquent, he doesn't look particularly intimidat- ing. Hank - not his real name - is an inmate of the nearby Maxey Boy's Training School, a home for 12- to 18-year old offenders. He has been convicted of crimes twice, once for car theft and another time for breaking and entering. There's a Honda 750 motorcycle waiting in his garage for him when he gets out. "I DON'T KNOW," he said, light- ing his cigarette and inhaling deeply. "I guess being here has helped me in some ways. Like, my sister died about a year ago, and I used to think about it every day. It used to really bother me all the time. "But they convinced me that I shouldn't let it bother me so much. She's dead and nothing's gonna bring her back, so I might as well live my life and not feel down all the time. "So I guess that was good," he continued. "And I guess I think about doing things now before I go ahead and do them. But they make it seem like being in the group is supposed to change you completely around. The "group" Hank was referring to is the family-like unit of nine inmates which comprises the nuc- leus of Maxey Training School's behavior modification program. The program is called Positive Peer Culture (PPC). "Before the staff decides to let you go home," he added, blowing a smoke ring "you have to get all the kids in your group to think you're ready. So you end up kissing their asses a little, and they kiss yours. It can get pretty phony." THE PPC GROUPS at Maxey live in a scattering of squat, sterile, dormitory-like structures on a sweeping, grass - covered campus. The school is located at Whitmore Lake, about 15 minutes from Ann Arbor on Highway M-36. The PPC system was designed by a psychologist named Harry Vor- ath, and is in use by institutions across the country. The nine members of each unit eat together, go to classes together, take their recreational activities together, participate in mainte- nance projects together, and relax together. Sometimes, when differ- ent group members want to take part in different recreational ac- .tivities, the units are permitted to break up - as long as everyone is together with at least two of their unit partners. Perhaps the most interesting ac- tivity of the PPC unit is the night- ly group meeting. During these en- counter sessions, the youths pre- sent their problems to the others in their group: by telling their life stories, describing the crimes they have committed and why they committed them, and relating any other difficulties that are troub- ling them. W/HILE ONE PERSON takes the role of presenting his prob- lems, the other group members are expected to help in any way they can. They are encouraged to object when they feel the person describ- ing his problems is being less than frank, to offer advice based on similar experience, and to offer support. The groups are supervised dur- ing their meetings and during their daily activities by a group leader, a member of the institu-, tional staff. "We see these people as having problems because they identify with a negative value system," said the state's director of Institutional Services, Virgil Pinckney, last week. "In other words, they are lems. If they don't recognize their problems, they're not going to be able to solve them. "Also," he continued, "we try to make helping a high-status thing. When a boy begins to help his peers, he is going to feel better about himself. When he begins to feel that he would rather help peo- ple than hurt them, we say that he is beginning to identify with a positive value system." Some critics of the PPC program claim that attempts to manipulate the psychology of inmates are, by their nature, wrong. But most of the residents of Maxey have com- mitted crimes that society does not* tolerate. They have gone through probation, halfway houses, or other such programs, and have continued to come into conflict with the law, repeatedly getting arrested and convicted. It's apparent that some- thing has to be done. They usually either get busted and sent back or come back by them- selves. "If the kids in your group see you running to go AWOL," he con- tinued, "they're supposed to try to catch you and stop you. But once you get to the woods (on the peri- phery of the campus), they're not supposed to follow you any more. "If you try to go off by yourself they call you a loner and say you have a problem," one young inmate said. But Maxey's director says it's supposed to be that way. "We want to keep that anxiety high," he remarked. "Hopefully the group living situation will create anxiety in all of them and as a result things will get done." +: ^:"..Y"::f:::" ,.. ..tA M1 :,Vaya .t h. v .:Vm m :":.:. ?} go off by yourself they call you a loner and say you have a prob- lem." 'HAT'S PART OF the idea. "We want to keep that anxiety high," Pinckney remarked. "We want to keep them working on each other. Hopefully, the group living situation will create anxiety in all of them, and as a result things will get done." From the PPC descriptive book- let: "If the student decides he doesn't want or need help with his problem, the group leader may in- dicate to the group that this per- son cannot escape the conse- quences of his irresponsibility sim- ply by denying it." So it's hard for PPC subjects to find a way to avoid the therapy. This is particularly distressing to those few residents who are in for repeatedly running away. There are probably better ways to treat someone who runs from a rigid family situation than to put him into what is usually an even more constrictive family-like en- vironment. While only a small number of Maxey residents are there only for status offenses, there are more at predominately female A d r i a n Training School in Adrian, Michi- gan, where PPC is also employed. "I've been busted for a .few things, like stealing cars. But they say I'm here mostly for a drug problem. I was into downers a lot, and smoked a little weed. Asked if he will resume taking drugs when he leaves Maxey Jim says, "I know I will. They think you take drugs to get away from your problems, so they think if, they make you look at your problems, you won't take any more drugs. "I don't take drugs to get away from my problems," he asserted. "I take drugs to get fucked up." But for all of Maxey's faults, how successful is the school in re- forming its residents? "Hopefully," noted Pinckney, "we can forestall their going back to being hurters once they leave Maxey. "EVERY YOUTH leaving here has a community worker. The par- ents, the community worker and the youth work out a plan for what the youth is going to do. "There are 125 boys," he contin- ued, "who have been out of Maxey, for one year. About 39 of those have been arrested again. "Eighteen to 22 per cent of the boys who leave here return here." Hank asked his group partner Jim, "When do you think you'll get out?" "I hope it'll be by Christmas," he answered. "He (the group leader) said I have a pretty good chance of getting out by then. What about you?" "He said maybe by Thanksgiv- ing." Stephen Hersh is a Daily day editor and staff writer. hurting people. "They think pretty badly themselves. They are unwilling face their problems. They need be helped.". of to to WITH SUNLIGHT streaming in through the window of his of- fice on the Maxey campus, Pinck- ney sat in his shirtsleeves, drum- ming a pencil on the table. "One thing we feel we have to do is to make the people face their prob- Said Pinckney, "Most of our peo- ple are in for more than what are called 'staus offenses' like running away. (A status offense is an act which is illegal for a juvenile but legal for an adult.) "We have people who were con- victed for property offenses, like car theft or breaking and entering. And we have some who are in for assaultive offenses, including mur- der. Most of the-youths involved in homicides were accessories to the act, but we do have some who ac- tually carried a homicide out. "JF THEY WANT TO get out of the institution," he remarked, "they have to do what the staff is asking them to do. Some will resist, but most will at least tentatively sav'okay, thinking that they'll see what happens if they play along. "The secret is, once they start playing along with the game, to get them to keep playing to the point where they honestly feel that the particioation is a good thing." "And helping others gives the people insight into their own prob- lems. For example, if a kid with a stealing problem criticizes 'some- body else in his group for stealing, he's going to be confronted with the problem that if stealing is wrong for that other person, it's wrong for him, too." The problem with trying to con- trol the behavior of an institution full of boys is that sometimes the controlling influence gets out of hand. An extreme case of this was re- "I ran one time, and my group saw me and chased me. I got past the woods, but they followed me anyway, and brought me back to the cottage. "All eight of them," he recalled, "jumped on top of me and pretty much beat the shit out of me. I got pretty bloodied up. And I had a bad bruise on my elbow, and they kent whacking it against the floor." Did the staff punish those who did the beating? "THE STAFF KNEW about it, but they didn't do anything. They say everybody in the group is sup- posed to care about everybody else, and if you run that shows you don't care." A source close to Maxey describ- ed a similar instance, in which two people who ran together were handcuffed, throw to the floor, and beaten and kicked by their group partners. One of them suffered broken ribs. So much for each member working to help all the others. Pinckney commented on those cases: "They're not a functioning group if they are hurting any of their members. That's foreign to the purpose of the program. "I would guess that there have been, there are, and there will be times that a group will use violence in dealing with its members. In instances of that, the staff would be both irresponsible and nega- tive." Even at times when PPC isn't being obviously harmful, many ACCORDING girls have a greater tendency to commit status offenses over and over, and to commit only status offenses. Still, there are those inmates who manage to find a way to avoid their treatment. Maxey resident Jim remarked, TO PINCKNEY,