I don't know whether I was that someone. If it was, what I talked about, if you have a large enough group to do it (say, 10 or more, which I rarely do), is to have them all circle up [which I always do as part of the implicit dancing-to-the-phrase, things-take-standard-numbers-of-steps, early success because they're responding to a call that means what they think it does portion), and after we've done all that, I squish the circle into a longways set and take hands four from the top. If they came with someobdy that person is probably in another couple now (unless they're at the top or bottom). "As you face the other couple, one of you is on the left - you're dancing as a lark; the other is on the right - you're dancing as a robin.)
You could also circle up, pick someone to start, and have them count off around the ring "robin, lark, robin, lark". In principle this means roles are arbitrarily assigned. In practice these new partners might negotiate. I try not to notice. -- Alan ________________________________________ From: Michael Fuerst via Contra Callers <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2024 8:24 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [Callers] Re: "Assigning" roles in the beginners' lesson? Sometime within the past 3 years or so someone posted an excellent procedure in this forum, which I did not copy, and could not find a year or so later when I tried. maybe someone can find it. _______________________________________________ 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]
