I start intro lessons in a circle, partner people off as soon as it becomes 
necessary, and teach them both sides of the swing (by asking them to shift 
their arms while swinging; this is partly about teaching them not to drag on 
each other). Then I say, your partner might have a preference so you should 
always ask — and I explain that the preference might be about an injury, about 
how they were taught to dance, or about balancing out their experience over the 
course of the evening. 

Obviously I can’t listen to every couple on the floor but from the mic it 
appears to me that new dancers do then ask those they’re dancing with and over 
the course of the first half the outcome reflects the character of the crowd 
more than individual new-dancer preferences. 

Perhaps also obviously to some people I do all of this without reference to 
role terms except to alert new dancers that they may hear a variety of role 
terms from experienced dancers on the floor. If I’m at a L&R dance I say 
explicitly that they might hear larks and robins, and here’s what that means. 
(New dancers were not born yesterday and they figure out the gendered role 
terms quickly if there are dancers using them.)

Incidentally, I find the claim Maia cites about the robin role being easier 
extremely questionable. Do people truly generally say/believe that?

Louise. 

> On 10 Mar 2024, at 14:48, Maia McCormick via Contra Callers 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> Hey there, hive mind,
> 
> When you're calling larks and robins, during the lesson, how do you
> a. explain the roles to the new folks, and
> b. put the beginners into roles for the duration of the lesson?
[the rest snipped for brevity]
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