Susan J. Ellis Gabbard
1970, B.A., Art Education, 1994, M.A., Art Education
Art Education Consultant, Oklahoma City, Okla.
CVAD Advancement Board Member
Instagram: SJGabbard
LinkedIn: Susan J. Ellis Gabbard
Would you tell us a bit about yourself?
I am a lifelong art educator. My career in art education began with my first teaching
job in San Antonio from 1971 to 1974 at Charles C Ball Elementary. I taught in two
private schools in Oklahoma and three other public school systems: Norman Public Schools,
Carrollton-Farmers Branch, and Oklahoma City Public Schools. I was invited to work
on a curriculum guide as a young teacher in SAISD by the Coordinator of Fine Arts,
Elizabeth Kefauver. The section I contributed to was "Classroom Management," about
orientation, student participation, leadership, and the arrangement of the art room
— mounting and displaying artwork. I went on to contribute to or write my own curriculum
guide at all the schools I worked in. I also worked at the state level on curriculum
writing in Texas, Oklahoma, and the national level. I fell into leadership in Oklahoma
when I volunteered to work with the Youth Arts Month committee at my first Oklahoma
Art Education Association annual conference. That put me on the OAEA board, where
I was elected president. I also served on the Texas Art Education Association board
as the first Middle-Level Division director. That happened after a group of us who
were attending the National Art Education Association convention found ourselves feeling
left out, as there was no middle-level division director, only a "Secondary" division
person. We felt like middle school needed its own division, so we decided to go back
and start a division in the states we were from and hoped that, eventually, NAEA would
follow suit and create a division. A year or so after it was brought up at the NAEA
Delegates Assembly annual meeting, the NAEA Board of Directors approved it. I was
fortunate to be able to serve in leadership positions throughout my teaching career,
eventually as the NAEA Western Region Vice President and then as NAEA President from
2005 to 2007. I was on the committee to review and write the new National Standards
for Visual Art. After my 30 years in the classroom, I went to work as the Visual and
Performing Arts Director for Oklahoma City Public School for 10 years for all the
music, theater, dance, and visual arts programs for K-12. When I retired at the end
of 2014, I served on the board of a fine arts charter high school, serving as board
president for four years.
Has there been a defining moment in your professional career or a particular moment
in your career that meaningfully altered your trajectory?
Mentoring is especially important. I've had several mentors in my life, but the most
important one was a woman who was the OAEA President, Jo Ann Adams, when I was a new
young member. She invited me to my first NAEA convention, which was held in Dallas.
She had a conflict and asked if I would “sit in” for her in the States Assembly meeting
and take notes. That group later became known as the Delegates Assembly, which was
all the state art education leaders meeting at the annual NAEA convention. As I observed
and learned about NAEA, I was impressed by the Western Region VP, who was a woman
from Texas. As I talked to Jo Ann about her, she said to me, “You could do that, Susan.”
I had never thought that, but her encouragement helped me think that maybe I could
be in that leadership position. So, I learned from Jo Ann how important it is to encourage
people who have the skills to seek to learn more about leadership and volunteering.
I am happy to say that several teachers and friends of mine have become successful
leaders. That is important for your peers and students in your classroom.
Parents are often skeptical about having their child major in an art or design-related
field. Was that true for you? What did you do to change their mind?
My single-parent mother was not so worried about my interest in visual arts, as she
loves art. She always said to get a teaching certificate because I could “always fall
back on it” to make a living for myself. While I had this idea, I wanted to be a flight
attendant. However, back in the 1960s, you had to be a certain height and weight to
get into that program, and I was too short. I wanted to travel. I have traveled to
many states and cities as well as abroad through my connection with NAEA by attending
national conventions all over the country and going to most of the states for various
meetings. I've also been asked to lead art teachers through the People-to-People Ambassador
program to Beijing; Saint Petersburg, Russia; Vietnam and Cambodia. I was awarded
a Fulbright Teacher Fund scholarship and spent three weeks in Japan learning about
their education system and touring all levels of schools. My mother was very thankful
and proud of all my accomplishments.
What aspects of art do you feel are the most important to communicate to audiences
you engage with?
Visual art has been around since the beginning of time, and it is basic for humans
to communicate through pictures, drawings, signs, and images. Visual art takes many
forms, and new ideas are evolving daily.