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William Freeman III

Manager of Higher Education Justice Initiative

William leads and manages the Justice Policy Fellowship, where he works with the policy team to provide an equity perspective on higher education in prison issues. Prior to joining The Education Trust, William served as an inaugural Justice Policy Fellow. Before that, William worked part-time with Prison to Professional as a program coordinator, where he recruited program participants, tracked attendance and assignments, and organized a virtual job fair. William also works with Dr. Stanely Andrisse as a research assistant. A native of New York, William grew up in Baltimore, where one wrong decision after another landed him in prison with a life sentence. During his incarceration, he got involved in the Goucher Prison Education Partnership (GPEP). He reentered society after serving 21 years in prison with 73 transferable college credits. He transferred onto Goucher’s main campus, where he completed his bachelor’s degree in Sociology/Anthropology and was selected to deliver the commencement for his graduating class.

Favorite Sports Team

New York Giants

What’s your favorite thing to do outside of work?

Ride motorcycles

What drew you to education?

I needed something to leverage against the poor decisions I made in my adolescent years. Higher education did so much more. It transformed the way I understand my errored decisions but maintain accountability and remorse.

Why are you passionate about working at Ed Trust?

Ed Trust launched the Justice Policy Fellowship, which in my opinion exemplifies “power sharing.” There is just so much equity and inclusion work to do to make a measurable difference. I am super excited to join the Higher Ed team to continue to expand the initiative.

Author Archives

Why Children’s Books Need to Discuss the Prison Industrial Complex

November 20, 2024 by William Freeman III, Alexa Garza

One example of book bans is the deliberate exclusion of any discussion of the history of the prison industrial complex from school curricula.

Introducing our Third Cohort of Justice Fellows

March 21, 2024 by William Freeman III

Out of more than 300 applicants from across the country, we have selected eight outstanding individuals to participate in this yearlong fellowship.

Formerly Incarcerated People Deserve Second Chances. I’m Living Proof.

May 12, 2022 by William Freeman III

Last month was Second Chance Month, so I’ve been thinking a lot about the barriers facing justice-involved people and what having a second chance really means for a formerly incarcerated,…

William Freeman III, The Education Trust Justice Fellow, Written Testimony on Implementing Pell Grant Eligibility for Students Who Are Incarcerated

June 30, 2021 by William Freeman III

Vanessa Gomez U.S. Department of Education 400 Maryland Avenue SW, Room 2C179 Washington, DC 20202 Download the Written Testimony Re: Docket ID ED-2021-OESE-0077 Dear Ms. Gomez, Thank you for the…