<p>Join Jen and Abi as they chat with Anna Gibson, TAB art educator in Santa Fe, and Steve Heil, New Mexico Lead Department Analyst at New Mexico Public Education Department, about nurturing advanced artists within a TAB (Teaching for Artistic Behavior) framework. They trace their TAB journeys, explain an inclusive advanced-art model (screening, teacher nomination, or self-selection), and show how authentic showcases and contests build agency, visibility, and healthy “eustress,” especially for students from marginalized backgrounds. The conversation blends creativity research, gifted-education practices, and culturally responsive teaching to keep young artists in the pipeline from elementary through high school and beyond.</p><p><br></p><p>Resources:</p><p>Teaching for Artistic Behavior: <a href="http://teachingforartisticbehavior.org"><u>teachingforartisticbehavior.org</u></a></p><p>TAB community (Mighty Networks): <a href="http://teaching-for-artistic-behavior-inc.mn.co"><u>teaching-for-artistic-behavior-inc.mn.co</u></a>. </p><p>National Art Education Association (NAEA): <a href="http://arteducators.org"><u>arteducators.org</u></a>. </p><p>New Mexico Art Education Association (NMAEA): <a href="http://newmexicoarteducators.org"><u>newmexicoarteducators.org</u></a>. </p><p>Recycle Santa Fe Art Festival: <a href="http://recyclesantafe.org"><u>recyclesantafe.org</u></a>. </p><p>Inside Out Project (JR Artist): <a href="http://insideoutproject.net"><u>insideoutproject.net</u></a>. </p><p>Zaretta Hammond — Culturally Responsive Teaching &amp; the Brain: <a href="http://crtandthebrain.com"><u>crtandthebrain.com</u></a></p><p>New Mexico Association for the Gifted (NMAG): <a href="http://nmgifted.org"><u>nmgifted.org </u></a></p><p>New Mexico Public Education Department (NMPED): <a href="http://web.ped.nm.gov"><u>web.ped.nm.gov </u></a></p><p>NAEP 2016 Arts Assessment (The Nation’s Report Card / NCES): <a href="http://nationsreportcard.gov/arts_2016/"><u>nationsreportcard.gov/arts_2016/</u></a> and NCES overview. </p><p><a href="http://nationsreportcard.gov"><u>nationsreportcard.gov</u></a></p><p>George Szekely: <a href="http://georgeszekely.com"><u>georgeszekely.com</u></a>; book Play and Creativity in Art Teaching. </p><p>Szekely website</p><p>Clyde Gaw (TAB/choice-based art): <a href="http://clydegaw.blogspot.com"><u>clydegaw.blogspot.com</u></a></p><p>Navajo Nation: <a href="http://navajo-nsn.gov"><u>navajo-nsn.gov</u></a></p><p>Pueblo of Zuni: <a href="http://ashiwi.org"><u>ashiwi.org</u></a></p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1N4XNMoTsjMVwkx7Y-puBCQVe7_TfKzdJkwgUGA1F6C8/edit?usp=sharing"><u>Here is a link to a lightly edited transcript </u></a>of this episode. We recognize that there are probably errors and grammatical issues. If anyone with the time or inclination to edit this wants to do so, please email us at <a href="mailto:storytellers@teachingforartisticbehavior.org"><u>storytellers@teachingforartisticbehavior.org</u></a>.</p>

TAB Storytellers

Abi Paytoe Gbayee & Jen Ferrari

S4E5: Meet Anna Gibson and Steve Heil

NOV 1, 202573 MIN
TAB Storytellers

S4E5: Meet Anna Gibson and Steve Heil

NOV 1, 202573 MIN

Description

<p>Join Jen and Abi as they chat with Anna Gibson, TAB art educator in Santa Fe, and Steve Heil, New Mexico Lead Department Analyst at New Mexico Public Education Department, about nurturing advanced artists within a TAB (Teaching for Artistic Behavior) framework. They trace their TAB journeys, explain an inclusive advanced-art model (screening, teacher nomination, or self-selection), and show how authentic showcases and contests build agency, visibility, and healthy “eustress,” especially for students from marginalized backgrounds. The conversation blends creativity research, gifted-education practices, and culturally responsive teaching to keep young artists in the pipeline from elementary through high school and beyond.</p><p><br></p><p>Resources:</p><p>Teaching for Artistic Behavior: <a href="http://teachingforartisticbehavior.org"><u>teachingforartisticbehavior.org</u></a></p><p>TAB community (Mighty Networks): <a href="http://teaching-for-artistic-behavior-inc.mn.co"><u>teaching-for-artistic-behavior-inc.mn.co</u></a>. </p><p>National Art Education Association (NAEA): <a href="http://arteducators.org"><u>arteducators.org</u></a>. </p><p>New Mexico Art Education Association (NMAEA): <a href="http://newmexicoarteducators.org"><u>newmexicoarteducators.org</u></a>. </p><p>Recycle Santa Fe Art Festival: <a href="http://recyclesantafe.org"><u>recyclesantafe.org</u></a>. </p><p>Inside Out Project (JR Artist): <a href="http://insideoutproject.net"><u>insideoutproject.net</u></a>. </p><p>Zaretta Hammond — Culturally Responsive Teaching &amp; the Brain: <a href="http://crtandthebrain.com"><u>crtandthebrain.com</u></a></p><p>New Mexico Association for the Gifted (NMAG): <a href="http://nmgifted.org"><u>nmgifted.org </u></a></p><p>New Mexico Public Education Department (NMPED): <a href="http://web.ped.nm.gov"><u>web.ped.nm.gov </u></a></p><p>NAEP 2016 Arts Assessment (The Nation’s Report Card / NCES): <a href="http://nationsreportcard.gov/arts_2016/"><u>nationsreportcard.gov/arts_2016/</u></a> and NCES overview. </p><p><a href="http://nationsreportcard.gov"><u>nationsreportcard.gov</u></a></p><p>George Szekely: <a href="http://georgeszekely.com"><u>georgeszekely.com</u></a>; book Play and Creativity in Art Teaching. </p><p>Szekely website</p><p>Clyde Gaw (TAB/choice-based art): <a href="http://clydegaw.blogspot.com"><u>clydegaw.blogspot.com</u></a></p><p>Navajo Nation: <a href="http://navajo-nsn.gov"><u>navajo-nsn.gov</u></a></p><p>Pueblo of Zuni: <a href="http://ashiwi.org"><u>ashiwi.org</u></a></p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1N4XNMoTsjMVwkx7Y-puBCQVe7_TfKzdJkwgUGA1F6C8/edit?usp=sharing"><u>Here is a link to a lightly edited transcript </u></a>of this episode. We recognize that there are probably errors and grammatical issues. If anyone with the time or inclination to edit this wants to do so, please email us at <a href="mailto:[email protected]"><u>[email protected]</u></a>.</p>