I agree with Yoyo and others: so much of the order I teach figures depends on 
the dancers and the gig. Having just done a couple one-night-stand gigs, I had 
the realization that I use the same formula more or less for all dances: Can I 
teach a dance in less than 5 minutes--or 8 at the most--and start with the 
music. Hence, for rank beginners, start with circles, into the center, swings, 
and promenades--I can do all this with music and no talking... Then the 
Virginia Reel. Then onto what dancers are ready for. On rare occasions, hands 
four dances. Usually not...

If I'm teaching after doing a beginners' workshop, I do an extremely glossary 
dance that covers the figures we drilled in the workshop: Lady's Chain, R&L 
Thru, Balance & Swing. The beginners have had a chance to walk it and learn it, 
then, when the dance starts, the experienced dancers have no problem helping. 

ABC
Improper
A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
A2 Women Chain over & back
B1 R & L Thru over & back --OR--
        B1 R & L Thru; Half Promenade
B2 Long Lines Forward & Back; Ones Swing

The OR B2 depends on how well dancers learned the R&L Thru. The challenge on 
the R&L Thru is mostly for the women, who are naturally steered the wrong way. 
Men can help, of course, in the pull by, but that takes awareness--something I 
usually point out in a workshop. And noting other comments, I have come to 
usually teach the Right & Left Thru first, the Chain second. I've done it both 
ways, and, of course, works or it doesn't...

Although I do think of how people enter into the next figure, I often think if 
it as what kind of connection there is, and whether the position is ambiguous. 
I'll alter dances based on this. Like, another beginner dance is the slightly 
altered Nice Combination, by the late Gene Hubert:

Nice Combination (slightly altered):
Gene Hubert
A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
A2 Down Hall Four in Line, Turn as Couples, Return, Fold to Circle
B1 Circle Left 3/4; Partner Swing
B2 Women Chain; Long Lines Forward & Back

The original ends with a B2 Women Chain, Star Left

Where a star starts and ends is a bit ambiguous until a dancer has internalized 
the bearings of the dance. So finding the next neighbor out of a mess of people 
possibly looking at their left hands in the center of the star is a challenge. 
Long lines forward and back has you connected to the previous neighbor and your 
next neighbor, and, if a mistake is made, is a bit easier to see where you're 
supposed to be. 

This lack of connection is what causes problems in things like a hey, where 
there is a milling about with no contact, and no sense of the bearings and 
characters like up, down, across, right, left, current neighbor, partner, etc.

If I'm calling to mostly beginners, and it's a regular contra series, I'll call 
Carlotta Wellington's "Taking Liberties with Jefferson"

Taking Liberties With Jefferson
Carlotta Wellington
Improper (or Proper--doesn't matter, though technically Improper)
A1 Circle Left; Star left (back to starting point)
A2 Ones Down Outside, Return, Step to Center making Line of Four with 
Twos--Ones in Center
B1 Down Hall Four in Line; Ones Arch, Twos Duck Through to end up above Ones, 
Return 2x2
     ("Twos in Front, Ones Behind)
B2 All Balance & Swing Partner, End facing a New Couple

I like Yoyo's dance below, and will start using it, too.

Could go on, but that's enough for now...

Erik Hoffman
 Oakland, CA

-----Original Message-----
From: Callers [mailto:callers-boun...@lists.sharedweight.net] On Behalf Of Yoyo 
Zhou via Callers
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2016 1:25 PM
To: Luke Donforth <luke.do...@gmail.com>
Cc: Callers@Lists.Sharedweight.net
Subject: Re: [Callers] Favorite dance to teach a ladies chain?

On Mon, Aug 22, 2016 at 8:18 AM, Luke Donforth via Callers 
<callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I've been thinking about glossary dances, and building vocabulary for 
> new dancers. I'm curious what your favorite dance is for teaching a 
> ladies chain for a crowd of mostly new dancers? Or if you don't have a 
> specific dance, what do you look for in a dance to make the chain as 
> accessible as possible?
>
> Just a chain over? Or a full chain over and back?
> Chain to neighbor? Chain to partner?
> What move best precedes the chain to set it up?
> What move best follows the chain that still helps new dancers succeed?
> Other factors you consider?

Definitely for the first introduction to courtesy turn, just one chain ("half 
chain") and with neighbor.

My choice of dance depends on the crowd and what issues they are having, and 
whether the beginners have enough experienced neighbors to help them. For 
instance, sometimes they struggle to end a swing or courtesy turn on the 
correct side. Entering a courtesy turn from a swing (or long lines) is fine 
even if dancers don't end on the left/right correctly. Going from courtesy turn 
into a ladies allemande or do si do is also fine if they don't end on the 
left/right correctly.

One thing that occurred to me while pondering left hand stars was:
what happens if the courtesy turn doesn't end on time but 4 beats late? How 
forgiving is the next move? With some figures like forward and back, or ladies 
allemande, it's easy to see what's going on and skip ahead. With left hand 
stars, though, it *looks* like it's easy to see what's going on, but there is a 
temptation to join in the star wherever (disorienting for what follows, usually 
progression) or dash madly to get into the right place (stressful). Or the 
whole star is late. And it's not intuitive to many dancers (even experienced) 
where they need to join into the star; it's less familiar than, say, a circle. 
And I've also seen dancers struggle with letting go of the star to find the 
next neighbor.


As you've said, I think there are choreographic needs that could be filled here 
- there is a common sequence that looks like 4. chain to P 5. ladies 
allemande/do si do 1 6. P swing which it would be great to do with neighbors 
instead.


Here's a suggestion - I'm ready to believe Bob (or another
choreographer) has written it already:

becket
A1: slice left to meet new N; ladies chain to N
A2: ladies allemande right 1; N swing
B1: down the hall, turn as couples
B2: circle left 3/4; P swing

Yoyo Zhou
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