As someone who *ran* a card sorter for IBM as my summer job working
through college,
I'm simultaneously laughing and shuddering.
My cards are the standard white kind -
except for the ones I wrote or rejiggered, they're on cream colored stock
Beckets are blue paper and double-progressions are green. Chestnuts
are light brown.
A pink highlighter stripe across the top means the two women have
action together (remember the days when that was heady?)
A blue stripe means the two men interact specifically. Yellow means
you escape your foursome somehow. Shadows get a grey pencil stripe.
Orange is particularly aerobic. Purple is proper.
Top left hand corner hand corner has a custom acronym - EFE means
"easy for experts", LNBD = "late night brain dead", FC = "feels cool"
but is actually simple.
Top right hand corner lists specific moves I prob. want to avoid doing
twice in a row - heys, down the center four-in-line.
The progression type is centered on the top edge.
If I fan them correctly, I can check everything at once.
Dances I do a lot are tattered.
Dances I do rarely are more pristine.
"Roll In the Hey" has a coffee stain.
"The Snow Dance" is missing a chunk I tore off to give someone my phone number.
"Baby Rose" was rolled up and used as an impromptu hot-pad for a stove
handle and doesn't stay flat.
Dances I learned prior to 1994 are in ballpoint.
After that it's finepoint felt tip.
Anything after 2018 when I started needing reading glasses is in thicker gauge.
I'm only on my second freezer-weight Ziploc bag, ever, and really proud of that.
:)
A
On 1/11/23, Joe Harrington via Contra Callers
<contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> The short version of this post is, how should I organize my dances? But,
> I'm sure if I ask that, the thread will have 100 replies and lots of
> confusion. My search of the list archives and web were surprisingly spotty
> on this question, with lots of anecdotes and no summary or comparison. And
> I'm not just asking for myself. While I've got a whopping 15 evenings of
> dance calling under my belt, I'm being called on to train some students to
> call for our college club, and they're asking the same question.
>
> So, I'm looking for one or more summaries from those wiser than I (ok, low
> bar!) of the kinds of systems for cards. This might better be asked as,
> what are the different approaches to programming dances, and what
> organizing systems make each of those easier?
>
> In a workshop of his last summer, Bob Isaacs related his system of colored
> cards for easy, hard, bouncy, flowy, sweetheart, and divorce-reconcile
> dances (I think those were the categories). Call easy dances first, call a
> sweetheart right after the break when they're most likely to dance with the
> person they came with. Save hard for festivals. Give them variety.
>
> But, I've wanted more categories, and what about finding the bouncy
> sweethearts? I'm really busy, so the idea of re-copying a hundred or more
> cards to make a new system doesn't thrill me, if I don't like my initial
> system. Maybe I'll get a database system to select dances with, and then
> have a set of alphabetized printed cards for the actual calling, though
> what if I'm wrong and need to change my program, as has already happened a
> few times when a ton of newbies shows up? I'm interested in hearing about
> anything particularly clever or efficient, especially if it doesn't involve
> a computer or tablet.
>
> A comparison of the different computer systems would also be welcome. I'm
> aware of programs by Will Loving and Colin Hume. I asked on one Facebook
> group for a comparison of these but got no response. Is the Caller's Box
> up to real-time dance selection at an event? That presumes wi-fi, of
> course, or at least cell signal.
>
> I'll toss in one amusing and possibly workable paper system, for a
> dedicated and extremely nerdy caller, which might be me...
>
> I heard recently (I believe from Angela DeCarlis) of a mechanical sorting
> system based on the Jacquard loom concept that became the Hollerith punched
> card system. I've never seen it in use. Does anyone do this?
>
> Figure out the ten or so characteristics you might want to sort on. For
> example, easy, medium, hard, bouncy, flowy, separates partners, sweetheart
> (keeps partners together), etc. Take a stack of cards and drill holes near
> the bottom edge, one per characteristic (you can drill a stack of cards if
> you sandwich them between wood and clamp them). Now, on a given card,
> punch out the rest of the paper between the hole and the edge of the card
> for each hole the card DOESN'T match. So, for an easy dance, you'd punch
> out the rest of the paper for the medium and hard holes (among others), but
> leave the easy hole intact. If you make a mistake, just fold a piece of
> tape over the gap above the hole to close the gap.
>
> Now, when you want to look at your easy, flowy, sweetheart dances, flip the
> stack so the holes are up, push a pencil or knitting needle through the
> "easy" hole and lift. Then, in the ones you pulled, push through the flowy
> hole and lift, and finally for that set poke through the sweetheart hole
> and lift. Those are the easy, flowy, sweetheart dances. If you want the
> medium or hard dances that are bouncy and that separate partners, you pull
> first the medium and then the hard dances, combine them, and then pull the
> bouncies from that set and the separators from that third pull. And so on.
>
> Good hole alignment and clean punching would matter, I think. If you are a
> real dance sorting fanatic, you could get like 30 holes around the card
> edges, but that would limit the writing space.
>
> I predict this will be all the rage, post-apocalypse...at least until we
> run out of cards. ;-)
>
> --jh--
> Joe Harrington
> Organizer, Greater Orlando Contra Dance
> Faculty Advisor, Contra Knights, the UCF contra dancing club
> contraknights.org
> FB, Ig: Contra Knights
> contradancerjoe@gmail.com
>
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