April 2022 | Ashley Y. Lipscomb

This recording is presented in partnership by Princeton Public Library and Not In Our Town Princeton. Ashley Y. Lipscomb, chief executive officer of the Institute for Anti-Racist Education, talks about the work of the organization.

The Institute for Anti-Racist Education is committed to ensuring that every student receives an education that is truthful, free from bias, liberating, and offered in a supportive, decolonized setting. They support creating Anti-Racist Educators and Educational Settings Across the Nation. Ashley Lipscomb, the CEO of The Institute of Anti-Racist Education will discuss lessons learned and give guidance for those who would like to do similar work in their school districts. We encourage you to invite like-minded friends to our discussion.

Ashley Y. Lipscomb, MT, MDiv
Chief Executive Officer
Ashley Y. Lipscomb has a wealth of experience working with, motivating, and advocating for students and educators.

After working as a teacher for five years and serving as a youth minister for eight years, Ashley has developed specialized interventions for her students, contributing to her success as an information literacy and language arts teacher at Frelinghuysen Middle School in Morristown. During her time in the classroom, Ashley advocated for the expansion of the language arts curriculum, leading to the incorporation of Young Adult literature that portrayed the Black experience. She also worked closely with school administrators to address pipeline issues contributing to the lack of a representative teaching staff.

A graduate of Hampton University (BA English and Master’s in Teaching), Harvard Divinity School (MDiv) and Montclair State University (Certificate in Supervision), Ashley has participated in and spearheaded several committees focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion in both K-12 and higher education settings. She provides DEI consulting to students in the Diversity and Inclusion Management Course at the Harvard Extension School.

Currently, her research uses a womanist methodology to center her story as a child of adjudicated parents and a Black woman from an urban community impacted by the racial implications of policies and laws, like mass incarceration, and analyze the effects they have on the emotional, spiritual, physical, social, political, and economic growth and development of the individual. Utilizing her research, she has created a unique framework to address the systemic racism that is deeply embedded in pedagogical practices and colonized curriculums which impedes the most vulnerable populations of students from flourishing.

This event was recorded on April 4, 2022.

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