Lots of (somewhat biased) thoughts.
Re teaching a separate contra "mini beginners course", my wife and
I recently taught a series of 7 one hour weekly classes at an
extremely large active retirement community. Overall that series
was successful, in that we now have 10 or so people who come
regularly and enjoy the class (we started with about 20, which
whittled down). We've followed up with a second series of 6 one
and a 1/2 hour classes, providing a mechanism for new comers to
join in by dividing the hour and a half into roughly 3 sections.
The first half hour focuses on beginner basics tailored for
whoever shows up. The second half hour is a couple of simple
contra dances. The last half hour pushes the envelope a little.
But, and the point of this paragraph, that first class with 20
absolute beginners and one experienced dancer (my wife) was
extremely hard. All of the beginner classes I have seen or
participated in that take place the half hour before the real
dance always have some experienced dancers joining in and helping
out. Even having just 1 experienced dancer in a foursome helps
immensely. I thought I was breaking our first class down to a
simple level when I said "find a partner" and ... but what does
"find a partner" mean? So it took much longer to teach than I had
imagined. Now the second series is bopping on along the way you
would expect because several dancers from the first series are
coming for that first half hour lesson and helping out. Eureka!
Anyway, my caution for a separate series of contra dance classes
for beginners is to really be ready to spend a lot of time on core
building blocks which are easy to take for granted when taught
with a few experienced dancers joining in.
Now for biased opinions ... I'd argue that if you have 15 new
people each dance and are not retaining 1 or 2 of them every
couple of dances then you should consider revisiting what it is
you are offering. I.e. what is the product you are selling and
what demographic are you targeting with that product. Scattered
considerations:
* There is value in a simple sense of comfortable community that's
appealing to some, but which won't tend to appeal to younger
dancers.
* A weekend evening is valuable social time. Are you providing
demographic density that's socially appealing? I go back to the
early '80s and was the prototypical hippie off the commune back in
Atlanta enjoying contra dancing in a room packed with my
demographic peers (vast majority +/- 5 years of my age).
* Do your callers call well? If not, can you take the marginal
callers out of rotation? (Oh, NO NO NO, that might offend
someone!)
* Are your bands exciting? Do you hire bands that are just good
enough but not exciting? (But they've been a part of our community
for the past 30 years!)
* Is your sound system good enough that the caller and music are
heard clearly throughout the hall?
* Is your dance playful? Can someone dip with both feet off the
floor?
* Are children allowed? (We typically have one or two children at
our dances who are under 10 years of age ... they dance well.)
* Do you have a solid representation of all ages in your dance
such that if a 25 year old comes to dance they don't feel out of
place? A 35 year old? A 15 year old?
* Do you tell your dancers to flirt when they gypsy? (Which is an
absolute NO NO for dancers in their 20s or 30s ... you do NOT tell
me who to flirt with ... guaranteed to not return)
I'm not saying you need to have exciting music with good callers
and good sound and a nice demographic range to have a good contra
dance.
There are contra dances that market comfort and stability that
have steady numbers.
But, if so, then tailor your community out reach to demographics
who are looking for comfort.
(promo follows ...) All of which is on the table for discussion at
the weekend retreat for contra dance organizers that my wife,
Jennifer Horrocks, and I are hosting July 20-22 in Rutledge, GA,
which is about an hour east of Atlanta just off I-20, for SE and
central Atlantic contra dance organizations. Discussions will be
directed to avoid tangents, with tangents noted on a "parking lot"
board to come back to. We will all say what we know and what we
believe. No one is required to adapt to someone else's beliefs,
etc. Food and housing provided. Last year discussions ranged from
how to prep a floor for a weekend to how to dampen fan noise to
how detailed contracts need to be, besides the more glaring how to
advertise in the digital age, etc.
-Heitzso
Here in
Ottawa, we're brainstorming new ideas for attracting brand new
people AND keeping more of those folks. We get about 15 new
people each dance and we think we're already doing lots to
support them (2nd dance free cards, smiley stickers to ID so
regular dancers even more supportive than usual, etc)... ...
still we don't retain as many of those folks as we'd like.
AND since we still haven't fully bounced back from a surprise
drop in attendance September 2016, we're trying to get
creative.
One idea we'd
like to try next year is a mini beginners course.
Has anyone
done this before? Any stories of successes? Tips of things
to avoid? Course content? Advertising? etc????
Here's are a
few initial thoughts that have been rolling around our heads:
- Partner with the city - have it as part of
their course offerings. (Or as part of a rec association)
- Approx 4-6 weeks long.
- Not only about moves but knowing where to be
when, transitions, timing, culture, etc.
Pros/Cons of doing something like this...??? There are
many but here are a few thoughts:
- Pro: Despite our community being super welcome (at
least we think so), some people are just TOOOOO scared
to try something so new/different in a big social
setting. This could address those people who have been
too scared to come out.
- Pro: Some brand new people are ok with the steep
learning curve. Others find the intensity of learning
so much so fast 'too much'. We could let brand new
people know that this is an alternative to learning the
ropes.
- Pro: Many adults look for new activities through
things like mini-courses (e.g., learn how to dance!).
We'd be finding a new pocket of folks.
- Con: Don't want potential beginners OR regulars feel
that beginners need to take a course before they are
welcome. (e.g., like MW where have to take a course
before welcome at certain dances.. .... this might
encourage some experienced dancers who are focused on
skill-level to push beginners to 'dance better')
- Con: Having a room full of beginners would remove all
the supportive help that experienced dancers can
provide. (Solution -- have a few volunteer experienced
folks come to the course)
Another thing we're working on is having our monthly
community talent dances be more beginner focused so that
should be neat... ... but a little different than a
condensed weekly course.