Yes, they do listen better when they are seated.  So do large groups of exuberant young adult square dancers!

 

Last year in one of my residencies, when I was having difficulty getting the attention of the students one little girl came up to me and said “Say Tootsie Roll Lollipop”.  I did, and there was a loud response, “We were talking, now we’ll stop”.  This worked very well for short periods.  I had to do it many times, but it was part of the culture of that school.  So if you can get a handle on what works in that school it would be helpful.

 

Ann

 

From: Callers [mailto:callers-bounces@lists.sharedweight.net] On Behalf Of Sue C. Hulsether via Callers
Sent: Monday, June 19, 2017 2:39 PM
To: Caller's discussion list <callers@sharedweight.net>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Quiet (was: Super easy dances - do they exist?)

 

I worked with a Physical Education teacher once who said “Here’s the deal…”  and all the kids shouted back, “What’s the deal?”.

 

Also —  someone gave me this gem early on in my teaching career:  They listen better if they are sitting down.

I use it alot:  “Everybody sit down and face the __________ (stage/center of gym/wherever you are).”  Quick demo, stand up and do that, sit back down.  

 

sch

 

 

Sue Hulsether
shulsether@mac.com

www.suehulsether.com
608-632-1267  Cell
608-629-6250  Home
P.O. Box 363
Viroqua, WI 54665



 

On Jun 18, 2017, at 11:55 PM, Linda S. Mrosko via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

 

Ooooh, that looks like a good one.  I'll add it to my list of potential methods.

I also thought of using a chant...like, "If I say Quiet, you say Right Now -- Quiet -- Right Now"

Can someone think of a better chant?

 

On Sun, Jun 18, 2017 at 11:12 PM, Jacob or Nancy Bloom <jandnbloom@gmail.com> wrote:

It isn't necessary to hire a person who can do a loud whistle - you can buy a loud whistle for a few dollars, and hang it from a lanyard.

 

Here's another technique for calling for quiet which I have seen work, although I haven't used it myself.

 

"If you can hear my voice clap once. <clap> If you can hear my voice clap twice. <clap clap> If you can hear my voice clap three times. <clap clap clap>  ... "

 

The few people who hear you the first time clap, and that attracts the attention of people near them, so more people hear you calling for them to clap twice, which attracts more attention.  Repeat until you have the attention of the room.  It won't solve the problem of keeping them quiet, but it doesn't hurt to have more than one technique to draw on.

 

And it's easier on the ears than that loud whistle.

 

Jacob

 

 

On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 12:50 PM, Linda S. Mrosko via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

Oh how I wish that would work.  I've tried that technique over the years.  They just ignore me.  Shushing works, but I have to repeat the shhhhh into the mic lots of times.  A big part of the challenge is the acoustics -- it's worse than being in a gym.  For instance, I get them quiet and then teach them the first move -- there is a roar -- I get them quiet again -- teach the next move -- there is a roar -- I get them quiet again -- teach the third move -- there is a roar -- ad nauseam.  The musicians crank up their music to the max for the dance, but even I can barely hear it over the din from the dancers.  Short of hiring a person who can do that loud whistle, I'm at a loss.  I've sort of grown used to it, but my temper is short and I really have to watch myself.

 

On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 7:42 AM, Jeremy Child <jeremy.m.child@gmail.com> wrote:

To quiet a room I use the Girl Guides technique:

 

I raise my hand, and anyone who sees me knows to stop talking and raise their hand too.  More notice this (other peoples hands up and slightly diminished volume).  This snowballs quite quickly as peer pressure kicks in, and is a very effective technique.  You have to teach it to them first, of course, but they pick it up quite quickly.

 

Jeremy

 

On 16 June 2017 at 20:10, Linda S. Mrosko via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

I lead an annual dance for 200+ 18-year olds in a hall with terrible acoustics.  Been doing it for 15+ years.  If they all whispered at the same time, it would sound like a roar in that room.  I can only do the most basic stuff most of the time...simple circles, longways with lots of sashaying, an easy folk dance.  But I experiment every now and then, which lead me to come up with the following dances which, for the most part, worked.  Am I stealing them from somebody?  (I like to give credit where credit is due.)

 

They call their dance "Swat the Flea".  I searched for a long time for a very easy dance that had a Swat the Flea and finally wrote this one --

 

BOX'NSWAT (Circle)

A1  Women into the middle and back; Gents into the middle & back

A2  All make a quarter turn to the right and walk single file to the right

B1  Women turn back to face partner -- all shake R hands with Partner & Box the Gnat; change hands, Balance & Swat the Flea

B2  DSD Partner; Allemande R w/partner 1-1/2 to progress (women end facing into the center ready to go F&B)

 

 

Since contra dances are almost impossible to teach to a loud, boisterous, energetic bunch of 18-year olds who have never heard of or seen a contra dance, I decided to give this a whirl -- and it worked -- mostly!  It would probably be better with a smaller more sedate crowd.

 

GREASE & GLUE (Contra formation -- Gender free -- all you need is a partner)

A1  Couple 1 split Couple 2, return to places; Couple 1 DSD

A2  Couple 2 split Couple 1, return to places; Couple 2 DSD

B1  Star R; Star L (w/hands)

B2  Couples face each other -- Couples DSD 1-1/2 ending back-to-back, facing next couple

 

 

As an aside -- how do you quiet a room with terrible acoustics full of loud people?  Thanks!


--

Looking forward,

Linda S. Mrosko

102 Mitchell Drive

Temple, Texas 76501

(903) 292-3713 (Cell)

www.zazzle.com/fuzzycozy* (Dance buttons, t-shirts, & more)

 

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--

Looking forward,

Linda S. Mrosko

102 Mitchell Drive

Temple, Texas 76501

(903) 292-3713 (Cell)

www.zazzle.com/fuzzycozy* (Dance buttons, t-shirts, & more)


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--




--

Looking forward,

Linda S. Mrosko

102 Mitchell Drive

Temple, Texas 76501

(903) 292-3713 (Cell)

(903) 603-9955 (Skype)
contradancetx.com

www.zazzle.com/fuzzycozy* (Dance buttons, t-shirts, & more)

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Callers mailing list
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