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Teaching a Plus Workshop
Tomorrow morning,
kent4str and I are conducting a two hour Plus workshop for the DC Lambda Squares. At last word, we had 21 people signed up.
I'm particularly interested in working the calls "peel the top" and "spin chain the gears": in our area, those seem to be the weakest and least-used calls. Various people have asked us to work "crossfire"; while they dance it adequately, they've felt a lack of full understanding of the call.
Beyond that, we're planning on calling through the entire Plus list to look for weak spots, doing a run-through of "coordinate" and "relay the deucey," testing them on lefty or sashayed versions of calls and trying spontaneous variants of known calls (eg. "spin chain & exchange the gears but turn the star only 1/4") as time allows. Of course, we'll happily take requests & suggestions from the floor.
Any other last-minute ideas?
I'm particularly interested in working the calls "peel the top" and "spin chain the gears": in our area, those seem to be the weakest and least-used calls. Various people have asked us to work "crossfire"; while they dance it adequately, they've felt a lack of full understanding of the call.
Beyond that, we're planning on calling through the entire Plus list to look for weak spots, doing a run-through of "coordinate" and "relay the deucey," testing them on lefty or sashayed versions of calls and trying spontaneous variants of known calls (eg. "spin chain & exchange the gears but turn the star only 1/4") as time allows. Of course, we'll happily take requests & suggestions from the floor.
Any other last-minute ideas?
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On the other hand, many callers tell dancers that when you start from x formation, you'll do this call and end up in a y formation. This goes over most new dancers' heads and isn't helpful when learning the call, although I like hearing it when we're workshopping.
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When teaching, I tend to go lightly on the speaking portion, knowing that most of it will go straight over the newbies' heads; I primarily hope that the explanation helps them remember associated chants (eg. "all 8 circulate... centers stay centers, ends stay ends"). Longer discussions are left to breaks between tips and workshops.
Another group I'm working with has problems as fundamental as basic circulates. Call "girls circulate" and the *boys* start wandering in random directions for reasons I can't even begin to fathom. *sigh* I'm hoping for an opportunity for a one hour workshop dedicated exclusively to Mainstream-level circulates.
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I now say the chants out loud when we're in class. I can still hear
But of course, the worst is when multiple people can't Turn Left or Turn Right. Grrrrrrr.