AllisonKudos for finding a recipe that works for YOUR dancers.  60-80 is an 
enviable number of attendees for any group of dancers, barn, contra, english, 
swing or other genre.
In my opinion, its often difficult to create an "experienced" group of dancers 
in a monthly dance simply because there are 30 days between one dance and the 
next.  No one has the mental or physical memory to improve if they practice 
once a month.  If someone misses a dance they are 2 months absent and need a 
full refresher.  
My guess is your dancers swap sides of the couple depending on whom they are 
dancing with?  If so that will make it difficult for them to learn the swing.  
It helps to be consistent in a role to learn swing, chain, and R&L.
Many newcomers come to a "regular" contra dance and never return and I believe 
some of that is the steep learning curve, the intense partner / neighbor 
interactions, internal pressure to "get it right", and  the physicality of the 
dance itself.  A well established contra group has expectations of having more 
challenging figures and I believe that sends some newcomers home in frustration.
I love your goal and encourage you to continue to focus on that. "have fun 
dancing along the way, and if it turns into something resembling contra 
eventually, then that's icing on top!"   I know this wasn't your question, but 
if you're looking for more dances that are accessible to all your dancers you 
might look here:  https://barndances.org.uk/
Read carefully, some are more difficult than others but there's an index 
according to difficulty.
You're doing a great job bringing community dance to your community and I 
believe that's an accomplishment in and of itself.Best,
DonnaEmail: [email protected]





-----Original Message-----
From: Allison Jonjak via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
To: Michael Fuerst <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Sent: Sun, Jan 22, 2023 7:05 pm
Subject: [Callers] Re: next steps between barn dance & contra, focus on fun 
figures

Thank you for the list Michael! 
We're beginning year 2 of dances, but we started at very barn dance, 100% 
newbies, "even long lines forward & back is new" level.  From your list, so far 
we're only missing chain, R&L across, courtesy turn, and becket. Swings are 
very new still and part of the work of our practice dance is giving me practice 
teaching "what are the best ways to help dancers lock on to the muscle memory 
of 'end on the side you started on." If anyone else is in these shoes of 
"literally zero dancers have ever done a ballroom swing before", so far my best 
results have been 1. asking the band to give a B2, pause while we rotate 
partners, B2, pause while we rotate partners, B2, pause while we rotate 
partners, et cetera; 
2. followed by Anderson Ferry Reel which lets them visually ID "woohoo yes I'm 
on the side I started" while not crashing the dance if they got it wrong.
Given that I have 60-80 dancers each night, I'm content just adding zero or one 
"new move" per dance right now and using it in 2 or 3 dances. My crowd is very 
mixed age and it could be that I'm not teaching new things as fast as humanly 
feasible... but at the same time my goal is "have fun dancing along the way, 
and if it turns into something resembling contra eventually, then that's icing 
on top!" 

On Sun, Jan 22, 2023 at 3:40 AM Michael Fuerst via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]> wrote:

For how many months have you been holding these dances?
I am assuming you are the caller.      
If you have  at least 6 or 8 regulars,  I would think, that after 3 or 4 
sessions   the core group should be familiar with all of  allemande, chain, R&L 
across, courtesy turn, swing, balance and swing, circle, F&B, dosido, Star, 
balance, balance & swing, becket, down the hall and tuning alone or as a 
couple.   If they don't yet know these, introduce 2 or 3 at your next dance.    
Gaps could be filled in for any newbies.   California twirl is easily 
demonstrated.    Many good contra dances exist that use only these.   Heys are 
optional.   I have called several evenings of dances without ever using a hey.  
     Roll-away are not needed.

This  link (a list of easy and intermediate dances I once put together, 
occasionally augment, but never cleaned up)  has many candidate dances,  
especially on the first several pages.     
http://aptsg.org/Dance/easy_dances.pdf

I  speculate that  your not having enough experience teaching new dancers may 
also be relevant.     Maybe you can get Steve Pike or Roger Diggle to call one 
of your dances,  and you can study what they do and answer some specific 
questions.
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]



-- 
Allison Jonjak
[email protected] 
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to