Amplifying Jimmy Akin's suggestions:
One online source for easy dances, once you get away from typical contras, is "A Barn
Dance Repertoire".
https://barndances.org.uk/difficulty.php
(The things ranked as difficulty 1 are in general pretty easy, though some of them are
really not contra-like.)
What you have to balance here is how much you're committed to contra formation and how
much you're committed to early dancer success.
If you have room in the hall, Sicilian Circle formation removes the confusion of turning
around at the ends - you just keep going around the ring. Barn dances usually have swings
that end where they started, rather than relying on them to be progressive, so you
don't have the fragility of swings ending up in the wrong place (and sometimes
you're not opposite your partner any longer, etc). Some of them don't even have
swings.
Modern contra is pretty challenging to bootstrap. It works fairly well for integrating
newcomers into an existing crowd if the experienced dancers make a point of dancing with
new dancers and if the callers don't throw in a lot of "lose your partner - find
your partner" dances.
If your experienced dancers will tolerate it you can build up through whole-set (what
Joe's calling "single minor") to get them used to listening to the music and
dancing to the phrase, Sicilian circles ("Haste to the Wedding" is great, and
you can have a short short partner swing that ends where it started; "Solidier's
Joy" has a chain that's a struggle with 100% new dancers but should go smoothly
with 50% new), and then graduate to duple minor longways once the new dancers have built
up some competence.
(That's a different use of barn dances than having a party for non dancers where you
can't expect anybody learned anything from the last dance and where you can pretty
much do anything you can put across becasue the dancers have no expectation - squares,
3-couple sets, etc. To do it this way you have to have pedagogical reasons for your
choices and fewer things that are just fun but don't lead anywhere.)
You're likelier to retain your experienced dancers thorugh unchallenging Sicilians,
etc, if you can get things moving
efficiently and have a high proportion of dancing.
Hee's an easy dance I wrote that makes a pretty good second dance with a lot of
beginners. It does have two swings and you do have to end up on the right side in the
swing but there's a while to sort that out. It's a pretty good one for group
consciousness to emerge:
CLAIRE'S REQUEST
Alan Winston 11/17/2017
Form:IC Fig:NB&S;OvalL&R;BTR,PS;Prom,WC:
A1: Neighbor balance and swing
A2: (Take hands, all around the set to make a big oval.). Turn the oval left and right.
B1: 1-2: (With hands, balance ring in original foursome
(keep the hand you've got with neighbor and take the free hand with your
partner)
3-8: Ravens/ladies draw Partners to their side for a swing.
B2: 1-4: Partners promenade to gents/larks side
5-8: Ladies/Ravens chain to current neighbor, look for new neighbor
-- Alan