Hi Sue,
I did a wonderfully fun artist-in-residency project for two days with a local 
elementary school last spring, working with a few folks from our house band 
(fiddle, guitar and accordion), though a single fiddle would have been fine - 
I've done that with school groups too.  It's a small school so we doubled up 
grades: k-1, 2-3, 4-5 and I got to work with each group for almost an hour and 
a half each day, then on the evening of the second day there was a school-wide 
festival, which included a short dance featuring the dances I had taught the 
kids, and our full band came to play.  The idea was that the kids would spread 
themselves out and help their parents/aunts/uncles/grandparents and older 
siblings to learn the dances.  It was a complete blast.  

I ended up choosing Virginia Reel, Haste to the Wedding, and Simple Square, 
plus I taught them all to waltz.  There's hardly a cuter sight than 
kindergarteners waltzing with each other, and they REALLY got into it, many of 
them becoming quite accomplished!  For waltzing, I completely played down the 
boy/girl thing and just said to choose anyone (including teachers!), and 
switched partners often, but I did teach the ballroom position as an option, 
after mastering just holding two hands.  The other three dances were all 
accessible to the full range of K-5, especially because I encouraged them to 
dance with people from other grades, or their family members, at the big 
evening dance. 

I, too, really recommend the New England Dancing Masters series, books and CDs. 
 We have a kids/family dance every month and I've found those to be hugely 
useful. The three books/CDs I use by far the most are Chimes of Dunkirk, Listen 
to the Mockingbird, and Sashay the Donut as I prefer these to the games.  I 
just called the dance, Sashay the Donut, Friday night, in fact, to a group 
including wee 4 year olds and a somewhat disabled grandparent and they were all 
beaming - it just took a little longer!

Good luck and, mainly, have fun!
Delia


On May 18, 2013, at 4:03 PM, Sue Robishaw wrote:

> Hi,
>    I've been asked to teach some dances in a local elementary school. It 
> would be grade by grade. Any suggestions/advice? I've called Family Dances 
> but not schools and am a bit hesitant. I'll have a fiddler for music.
>    Thanks for any help!
>        Sue Robishaw, U.P. of Michigan
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers


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Delia Clark
PO Box 45
Taftsville, VT 05073
802-457-2075
[email protected]




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