A former inmate who earned his diploma in prison returned years later as a Harvard scientist to inspire and celebrate incarcerated graduates, urging them to believe their future can be greater than their past mistakes.


A former inmate who once earned his high school equivalency diploma while incarcerated has returned to the same correctional facility as a successful scientist and educator. Christopher Medina-Kirchner, now a teaching fellow and postdoctoral research scientist at Harvard Medical School, delivered a graduation speech to inmates at the Racine Youthful Offender Correctional Facility in Wisconsin.
The graduation ceremony celebrated 29 incarcerated students who completed various educational programs. It marked Medina-Kirchner’s first visit to the facility since his release years ago. Speaking to the graduates, he emphasized the importance of believing in a better future, noting that without hope, people are unlikely to pursue meaningful opportunities.
Drawing from his experiences in higher education, Medina-Kirchner praised the graduates for overcoming challenges unique to prison life. He said earning an education behind bars often requires extraordinary determination, focus, and resilience in an environment that can make learning difficult.
Before transforming his life through education, Medina-Kirchner struggled with crime and drug-related activities, leading to repeated encounters with the justice system between the ages of 18 and 25. After his release in 2013, he pursued higher education, eventually earning a bachelor’s degree from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and a doctorate from Columbia University.
Today, his research focuses on MDMA and its effects, with the goal of improving evidence-based approaches to drug education and public policy. During his speech, he encouraged graduates not to allow their past mistakes, criminal records, or other people’s opinions to define their future potential.
Among the graduates honored at the ceremony, nine earned mechatronics certificates through Gateway Technical College, while 20 completed high school equivalency diplomas. Several also completed specialized pre-apprenticeship programs connected to the construction trades. More than 30 family members, teachers, and prison staff attended the event to celebrate their achievements.
After the ceremony, Medina-Kirchner met individually with graduates, offering guidance about life after release and discussing both the opportunities and challenges they may encounter. The facility holds three graduation ceremonies annually and reported that 142 incarcerated individuals completed high school or post-secondary educational programs during the 2024–2025 fiscal year.
Wisconsin corrections officials highlighted the growing number of educational opportunities available within the prison system, stressing that such programs help incarcerated individuals develop skills, pursue careers, and build better futures after release.
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