I love these, Rob!!
On Wed, Jun 26, 2024, 8:40 PM Robert Matson via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Hi Dianne and All,
 I worked with disabled athletes for 11 years, including people with CP.
 From my experience, if I was in this situation, I would seek to speak, in
 advance, with the person's caregiver, to explain the activity and ask them
 for advice on every angle of concern: "here's what we do, can they do
 that?"  "If they can't do [the thing] how would you handle it?" 
"Can you
 be there and partner with them?"  "If you can't be there, who else can
 partner with them?"  "What would be your own concerns if you were taking
 them to a dance?"  etc.  Likewise, I'd ask for advice from whomever it is,
 wherever it is that the buck stops, so you know, at the end of the day,
 that you're doing the right thing if, say, someone falls.
 I'd also wonder if it'd be best to line up partners for them, in advance.
 If it's a camp with counselors, guess who.
 At the same time, looking at the dance event itself, if it looks likely
 they won't have fun, I'd consider inventing special roles within the dance
 that have an enviable cool factor.  For example, can you make them your
 co-caller?  E.g., if you do Sasha, they get to call the "1-2-3-Sasha...."
 If you do Heel Toe Polka, they get to say the "Heel toe" part, or maybe
 even call the whole thing once you, the lead caller, can drop out, or else
 call along with or echo you.  Etc.
 One might also invent some ornament or exclamation for them to interject,
 thinking back to a recent discussion here about the shouting of "Hoy!," and
 you delegate to them the job of shouting Hoy or Hey or Hi or whatever at
 the end of each 32 bars or whenever they feel moved, or invent some funny
 instruction like "smile two times!" and you show them when to say it, more
 or less.  Another idea, for giving them a leadership role, would be to
 write out announcements for them to read, like the name, source, author of
 the next dance and next tune, or introducing the musicians, or maybe write
 out a dozen index cards with jokes that they get to read.  Basically, offer
 them leadership; teach them to call.
 Also, since it's a camp, there's always the possibility of a flashlight
 light show.
 I hope that sparks something for you.
 Rob
 - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Robert Matson
 Cell: (917) 626-2675
 On Wed, Jun 26, 2024 at 1:35 PM dpalmerquay--- via Contra Callers <
 contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  I’ve been asked to call a dance at a church camp
for middle schoolers at
 the end of July. Two of the campers have cerebral palsy - one is fairly
 mobile but the other is on crutches. I’m looking for dance ideas that could
 be used as is or modified for a dancer on crutches.  About 40 people are
 anticipated (middle school aged campers and high school and adult staff).
 Thanks,
 Dianne
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