Is Will Loving in the house? Or anyone from the
Amherst, MA, Wednesday
night contra? He was the ONLY person on the board over 30 in the years
after he founded it, and it was largely a college/post-college crowd, the
few times I was privileged to attend. He told me that was his formula.
Maybe he can give details. This was in the mid-2010s, I think.
To me, there is a big difference between events run by and for younger
dancers and broad community events with a predominantly older crowd trying
to make up for our lame recruiting/retention efforts a few decades back, so
we can keep our dances from dying as we age out, or to bring some energy
into them, or out of some principle of inclusion. Or whatever our real
reasons are for focusing so heavily on recruiting younger dancers (which,
guilty, I do for their energy).
--jh--
On Wed, Nov 8, 2023 at 9:27 AM Chrissy Fowler via Organizers <
organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Thanks Dana, for this reframing of the
conversation! Shakes things up a
bit in my mind. Love it.
In Belfast ME, where our demographics have skewed toward a majority of
dancers in teens-early 30s, we recruited board members in that age range
because they already were the majority. (See
https://www.belfastflyingshoes.org/board-of-directors)
I’m curious what other organizers have experienced when they recruited
people in teens/20s in order to increase that demographic among their
dancers.
Cheers,
Chrissy Fowler
Belfast ME
<><><><><><>
chrissyfowler.com <http://www.chrissyfowler.com> dance leadership
westbranchwords.com <http://www.westbranchwords.com> academic
transcription
belfastflyingshoes.org <http://www.belfastflyingshoes.org> participatory
dance & music
------------------------------
*From:* Dana Dwinell-Yardley via Organizers <
organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
*Sent:* Monday, November 6, 2023 11:13:16 AM
*To:* A list for dance organizers <organizers(a)sharedweight.net>
*Subject:* [Organizers] Re: Attracting young dancers
And I forgot to note that my dance is Montpelier, VT!
On Mon, Nov 6, 2023 at 10:56 AM Dana Dwinell-Yardley <danadwya(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
I'm coming in late to this discussion with a thought from the Form the
Ocean dance weekend in 2019. They held a community discussion at that
weekend structured around the idea of starting at "Point D." As in, with
big conversations in our communities, we so often churn round and round on
points A, B, C: "how do we get more diversity?? we're so [white/old/middle
class/etc]! but we need diversity!"
What if, instead, we started at point D and bypassed those first few
questions that we always start with?
I would suggest that Point D for this conversation about young dancers
might be:
*"Our dance *already has* age diversity. How shall we be with the people
already in the room?"*
rather than scrambling to say "we need morrrrrrrrre young dancers!"
I'm 36, an in-between sort of age in the contra dance world. I started
dancing 19 years ago, when I was 17. I absolutely started dancing because
it was a place to hang out with my friends. And, I could tell which adults
would talk to me like I was a fellow dancer, and which ones talked to me
like I was a Young Person. I still have friendships with the ones who
treated me like a person to this day.
Get to know your young dancers like you would get to know anyone else you
don't know yet! Don't be overbearing! Be friendly, ask them to dance, learn
about their lives, but also leave them alone to do their own thing and hang
with their friends. Treat them like humans and not A Class of People We
Need for Diversity. People can tell when they're being tokenized.
(My friend group and I had an experience about 4-5 years ago at our local
English dance where the dance organizers/regulars practically *pounced* on
us as we walked in the door and were like "wow! young people! so nice to
have young people! can we give you a discount? will you come back again?
will you bring your friends?" and we were like "...um we're just here to
English dance?" It was very off-putting and made us LESS likely to come
back again!)
I also have lots of thoughts about fostering a culture of consent,
non-gendered role terms, young people on your organizing committee, etc,
but I'll save them for another day!
Thanks,
Dana
On Sun, Oct 29, 2023 at 10:55 AM Sandy Seiler via Organizers <
organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Our community, like many others, has fewer young dancers than we would
like. I am wondering how different factors influence that and what we can
do.
Does the night of the week matter? We dance on a Saturday night. Would
Friday be better?
Does frequency matter? We dance once a month?
Does location matter? We have a college (University of Kansas KU) Would
a dance location closer to or on campus matter?
Are outreach strategies effective and what has your community found
successful?
Thanks,
Sandy Seiler
Lawrence, Kansas
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--
Dana Dwinell-Yardley
pronouns: she/her/hers
802-505-6639
Montpelier, Vermont
--
Dana Dwinell-Yardley
pronouns: she/her/hers
802-505-6639
Montpelier, Vermont
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