The way I see it, an essential part of the lesson is listed in what Dave talked 
about, but I feel that it is somewhat useful to demonstrate an actual dance, 
like Jefferson & Liberty or Babaloo's Reel, something super simple with few 
moves that demonstrates and gives them practice dancing WITH music.  If I don't 
have music, I'll deedle along at dance tempo to give them the impression of 
what it feels like to dance in line - to know the spot in the dance where you 
are, to show how the music and dancing fits together, things like that.  That 
way they know exactly what we will be doing through the course of the evening.  
Getting them dancing gives them a sample of the evening and most new dancers 
have told me they found that extremely useful.
Perry
      From: Dave Casserly via Callers <[email protected]>
 To: John Sweeney <[email protected]> 
Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:02 PM
 Subject: [Callers] content of introductory lesson
   
Hi all,
I've included John's comments below, but thought I'd start a new thread on 
introductory lessons, which is sort of the bigger picture of what we talk about 
when we talk about a caller teaching the swing.
I don't call much, but I still teach introductory lessons before weekly dances 
every now and then.  In my community, it's pretty common for local callers (or 
even some local dancers who aren't callers) to teach the lesson when there's an 
out-of-town caller booked for the night.  I think this system has advantages 
and disadvantages: as an organizer, I like being able to control what goes in 
the lesson, since, as discussed below, I have some fairly strong opinions on 
what makes an introductory lesson welcoming and successful, but if I were a 
traveling caller calling my home dance, I would feel at a disadvantage if I 
could not tailor the lesson the program I intended to call.
So, what do you all focus on when teaching the lesson?  It seems from the 
previous thread that there are several approaches:
- teach the moves that are most difficult for dancers to get (right and left 
through, ladies' chain)- teach the moves in proportion to how many times you 
call them during the night (swing, allemande, circle)- teach the moves that 
will mess you up the most if you don't do them right (half promenade across, 
half chain, half anything, really)- teach skills, such as sharing weight
My approach is really to do none of these.  I do teach dancers how to share 
weight, and generally teach it in the context of a circle, then a two hand walk 
around with one other person, then a buzz-step swing.  If I have time after 
that I may quickly go through a few other moves, but I don't consider that a 
necessity.
Instead, what I focus on is teaching newcomers to dance with a variety of 
partners, ask experienced dancers to dance, listen to the caller, look up for 
help when lost, and clap to show their appreciation for the performers at the 
end of each dance.  I tell them explicitly what I think is most important and 
what I am there to help them get out of the night: I want nobody to get hurt, 
and I want them all to have a good time.  At the end of the lesson, I will even 
try to point out experienced dancers who I think the newcomers should dance 
with at some point.  I tell the newcomers that they should dance each dance 
with a different person, that it is totally fine to sit dances out if they need 
a break, and that if somebody asks them to dance but they don't want to dance 
with that person, simply say "no thank you."  I also identify members of the 
dance committee who are in the room in case they have any questions at all or 
have any problems during the dance, and again stress to them that we are here 
to help them have a great time.
The way I view it, if I teach 20 moves in a 30-minute lesson, the newcomers 
will not remember those moves after an hour of dancing.  If I teach them that 
the community is committed to ensuring they have a safe, fun dancing 
experience, and that experienced dancers will help them through the rest, I 
think that is 90% of what helps newcomers get the most out of their first dance.
Obviously, my view of how the lesson should be only works in communities with a 
lot of experienced dancers.  I'd never be able to get away with teaching a 
lesson without telling anybody what an allemande is if the hall is full of 
beginners.
-DaveWashington, DC

On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 2:13 AM, John Sweeney via Callers 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks for all the great ideas/ Yes, I should say gallop instead of skate-board 
– I start with “Now walk fast on the spot” before I tell them to turn, so I 
assume they are going to keep alternating their feet, but some don’t!  Maybe 
“gallop” will help.  I did get one guy at a workshop tell me that he had been 
taught to keep one foot fixed on the floor on a single spot.  I showed him what 
would happen if we both did that – in slow motion, otherwise it could have been 
quite painful J Ron asked, “Okay, so what about my first comment: Not everyone 
is physically able to do the buzzstep swing?” Well, my first statement was 
“Yes, of course I always tell dancers that they can walk instead of buzz” and 
the last line of my sample teach was, “If you are having trouble with the 
buzz-step then you can always just walk.” So I thought I had covered that. 
Sorry if I have misunderstood. At one of the weekly sessions I run we get 
around 25 to 30 people each week; most of them are ladies, and the ages range 
mainly from 50s to mid-80s.  We provide badges saying, “Please swing gently” 
and we tell them they can walk.  I always teach the buzz-step and they all try 
it.  Most of them carry on doing a buzz-step and very few wear the badges after 
the first few weeks once they have got used to swinging. They also love my 
no-swing contras – they don’t need swings to have fun! Ron also said, “The 
single most important thing to teach a dancer is "it's okay to make 
mistakes".”.  I agree that that is important and we joke about the mistakes a 
lot. Sometimes they have the most fun when they fail completely! But my Rule #1 
is:“Every dancer has the right to get on the dance-floor and have fun without 
getting hurt.”                                                        I have 
been hurt a lot on the dance-floor.  I used to dance Ceroc/Modern Jive three or 
four nights a week. You know the way that some people yank on you when they 
step back in the Balance before a swing?  Well in Modern Jive you step apart 
about once every eight steps, and the general level of technique teaching at 
Modern Jive classes is very low, so most of the dancers have never been told 
that they shouldn’t pull when they step back. In fact some of the <expletive 
deleted> teachers actually tell them to pull to generate tension, without 
mentioning that the level of tension required is around the one ounce level, 
not the one ton level!  So I ended up with repetitive stress injuries which 
weakened my muscular infrastructure and when an aerial move went wrong in a 
practice session I ended up tearing one of my rotator cuff (shoulder) muscles 
badly. Aerials: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJnL_Y63AnY – that’s me in 
black. So, having had two shoulder operations, and not wanting any more, if my 
partner appears to be about to throw their whole weight at me when they step 
back in a Balance & Swing then I step forward to prevent it.  (Once having 
asked a lady to stop pulling on the step-back as she was hurting me, and 
failing to get through to her, next time we stepped back I pulled on her.  She 
immediately got cross and said I had hurt her. The irony appeared to be 
completely lost on her!).  And if a lady leans back in a swing then I move my 
hand from her shoulder blade to her waist so she has to stand up or fall over!  
I have learnt a lot of self-defence skills over the years! I recently ran a 
“Contra Skillz – Style and Technique” workshop at a UK festival and the 
experienced dancers loved it – most of them do want to improve and do want the 
caller to do some teaching.  (Of course, they self-selected by attending the 
workshop in the first place!) One of the guys is a very good dancer, but my 
wife, Karen, complained that his swinging was far too forceful; he was rigid 
and using too much power.  The first thing I taught in the workshop was that 
most people will swing better if they relax.  Next time she swung with him, he 
was, as usual, rigid, but, because I had empowered her by teaching relaxation, 
she felt able to say, with a big smile, “And relax <she breathed out>” – he did 
the same and suddenly turned into a wonderful swing partner.  She heaped on the 
praise and he felt good that he was giving Karen a better swing. I agree with 
Tom that we all have different perspectives and so we approach things 
differently.  That is a good thing as far as I am concerned.  If all callers 
ran their evening the same way then the dancers would get bored.  Different 
approaches help different people, and give the variety needed to keep the dance 
alive. My perspective is based on learning the Galway Swing from my Irish 
mother when I was a teenager (take an Allemande Right hold, each of you cup 
your left fingertips around your partner’s right elbow, buzz – great fun!), so 
I have been buzzing for fifty years and would always choose it.  But of course 
I walk if I or my partner is tired, or if my partner can’t cope with a fast 
swing, or if they are such a bad swinger that I need to slow the swing down to 
avoid damage.  Though actually you can do a slow, controlled buzz-step swing 
and that can feel great too. I also agree that programming is crucial to a 
successful evening.  Apart from avoiding overuse of particular moves or 
sequences, providing variety, and trying to include something a bit different, 
I am also building the move set slowly so that newcomers get to a point where 
they can do great dances later in the evening because they have seen all the 
bits already. The Right & Left Through is such a counter-intuitive move that I 
often leave it out completely.  If I need it for a particular dance then I can 
change it to a Half Promenade.  I certainly never spend time teaching it in a 
beginner’s workshop unless I am planning to use it multiple times in the 
evening. Thanks again for all the great ideas in this thread. Maybe I should 
stop rambling now…  J             Happy dancing,                   John John 
Sweeney, Dancer, England   [email protected] 01233 625 362 & 07802 940 
574http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events & 
DVDshttp://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent 
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David Casserly
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