Many experiences with enthusiastic teens dancing for the first time has taught 
me the importance of training them to listen for each successive call. They can 
lapse into autopilot on any figure--I've had teens who take forever to get a 
star rotating, then just keep going to indulge their success through two or 
even three subsequent calls.

Starting out with longways dances (such as the many variants of the Virginia 
Reel) with several 8-count figures ending in long lines facing across can 
establish good listening behavior especially if you insist they wait for each 
call before launching into the next figure. I try to get them to really notice 
how dynamic it is when the whole set of dancers moves together so they are 
thinking more about the big picture. I also tell them if they realize they're 
really late on a figure, skip it if they can and wait for the next call (and I 
try to pick dances that tolerate that well).

As far as contras go, dances with 16-count swings actually have worked better 
for me because the dancers usually wear themselves out more quickly and settle 
down into a more energy-conserving mode. But in the walkthrough and while the 
dance is in progress, I almost always insert a warning such as "end the swing 
and face across" (or whatever) before I give the call for the next figure. 

Chip Hedler

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