Craig Steven Wilder shaking hands.

The maximum-security inmates who beat a Harvard College team in a debate two years ago put a national spotlight on the prisoners’ ambitious college program, the Bard Prison Initiative.

Now Bard College is launching a new satellite in another site that bucks tradition: the Brooklyn Public Library in Prospect Heights.

The “microcollege” will be free for students, and aims to attract talented low-income applicants who haven’t sought degrees due to the pricetag or personal hardships. The experiment aims to find ways to make college possible for people who are often discouraged, excluded or underestimated.

“The way we go about college access in the U.S. is a catastrophic failure,” said Max Kenner, vice president for institutional initiatives at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson. “Everyone in higher education has to be more imaginative and daring in thinking outside conventional ideas about how to locate and engage students.”