I do #3 and have then try both sides with two people and then choose a role for the rest
of the lesson
On Nov 21, 2022, at 11:55 AM, Maia McCormick via
Contra Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hey folks,
Calling the occasional gig again after uh, everything, and I'm finally inspired to
iron out a bit of my beginners' lesson that I've always just fudged in the past:
when calling gender-neutral, how do you have the beginners pick roles?
My spiel is generally, "we have these two roles, they're almost entirely the
same with some small differences, pick one and stick with it for a few dances just to
start and then you can try the other if you want, the most important thing is knowing
which role you are for a given dance."
In my lesson, I alternately:
say "whoever's standing on the right of this couple right now, that's the
robin" and then teach the swing in those roles
tell folks "decide who's the lark and who's the robin" with no
particular context and they pick arbitrarily
teach both sides of the swing and let them choose roles based on which swing feels more
comfortable
But it feels clunky and awkward every time.
I'm curious if others have similar experiences, or things they do in their lessons
that feel effective at getting people into one role (for now) with a minimum of confusion.
Hit me with your wisdom!
Note: this is NOT an invitation to debate whether contra roles should be gendered, or
which set of role terms we should use, or whether we should use role terms or positional
calling. If you must, please make a separate thread so I can mute it. If such discussion
crops up in this thread, I'd ask people not to respond, or to take responses to a
separate thread. Thanks.
--
Maia McCormick (she/her)
917.279.8194
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