(Photo: Lee Pellegrini)

Forward focused

Woods College sophomore Christopher Gannon received a prestigious Yale fellowship for formerly incarcerated students

If Christopher Gannon had to choose one word to describe the last 10 months, it would be 鈥渟urreal.鈥 The Dorchester native was released from prison in February, accepted to a at Yale University in May, and enrolled in his first semester at 情色空间鈥檚 Woods College of Advancing Studies in September. Looking back, none of it seems real.聽

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have scripted it any better,鈥 he said. 鈥淐oming out of prison I had really bad anxiety but it鈥檚 been one good thing after another. It鈥檚 unbelievable.鈥

Gannon鈥檚 commitment to education began behind bars. In 2022, he was part of the third cohort admitted to the Boston College Prison Education Program (PEP), a degree-granting program that brings college-level courses to incarcerated students at the Massachusetts Correctional Institute in Shirley, Mass. He took classes in psychology, geology, and theology with Boston College faculty, and threw himself into his coursework.

鈥淚nstead of chasing nonsense, like so many of my friends did, I ended up chasing education,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚 figured this was probably my best opportunity to turn my life around.鈥澛

Earlier this year, with his release coming up, Gannon applied to the inaugural National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates at Yale University, a 10-week residential fellowship designed to provide STEM training and computational exposure to formerly incarcerated students. In his application, Gannon 鈥渨ent all out,鈥 describing his background as a high school drop-out with limited education, as well as his goals for the future. He was accepted almost immediately.

In May, he moved from a residential rehabilitation program to an Airbnb in New Haven, Connecticut, where he lived with six other men and women participating in the program. In the first week, each student was assigned a mentor according to his or her research interests. Gannon matched with faculty from two neuroscience labs within the Yale School of Medicine, so he joined the teams of both.

I feel like I鈥檝e got to prove that people in prison can succeed. I try to do my best and show that I鈥檓 serious and that I want to learn and I want to give back.
Christopher Gannon

Over the next several months, Gannon established a new routine: He attended weekly tutoring sessions to strengthen his writing and coding skills. On Mondays and Thursdays, he worked alongside a Ph.D. student at the , which uses genetics to better understand brain diseases like schizophrenia. Three days a week, he learned data science skills like logging code with a postdoc at the , where researchers study the genetic and environmental factors associated with psychiatric disorders including opioid abuse, alcoholism, and PTSD.

鈥淭hat was right up my alley,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are things I鈥檝e battled with all my life, so to not only be helped by them, but be able to give them first-hand knowledge was really cool for me.鈥

Gannon quickly developed relationships within both labs, using Slack to message professors between sessions and shadowing other students on his off days. In July, when the program ended, both of his mentors asked Gannon to stay on for another month, so he did, relishing the chance to continue learning at one of the world鈥檚 leading research universities.

鈥淭hey taught me about neuroscience but also coding and writing scripts, RNA sequencing, how to break down big data, things like that,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淎nd just like at 情色空间 they were so down to earth. Getting out of prison is incredibly hard, and to be around people who understand that was everything to me.鈥澛

This fall, 10 months after his release, Gannon arrived at Woods prepared for his next role鈥攁s a Boston College sophomore. Welcoming him to campus were a few familiar faces, including Woods Dean David Goodman, who teaches Abnormal Psychology in the PEP and recalls Gannon as a motivated student with a 鈥渉unger for learning.鈥

"He leaned in with his full effort and truly impressed me with his preparedness, questions, and quick learning," Goodman said. "He seems to take up the psychological sciences naturally, and I am so proud of him for finding his stride and forging such an amazing path forward. The field needs him and we are excited to support him in any and every way."

Inspired partially by Goodman鈥檚 class, Gannon has declared a major in psychology, and hopes to one day pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience. As he gains his footing in the real world, he feels a mixture of pride at his accomplishments and pressure to be a model student.聽

鈥淚 feel like an ambassador, like I鈥檝e got to prove that people in prison can succeed,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 try to do my best and show that I鈥檓 serious and that I want to learn and I want to give back鈥攚hat I received, I want to give back.鈥