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A Love & Passion  www.wesquaredance.com   by Jerry Junck  reprinted from USDA NEWS October – December 1998
Square dancing needs a resumption of caller leadership to teach new dancers and provide a choreographically easy enough dance environment for those new dancers to succeed. From our leadership, we must have a love and passion for square dancing. In addition, we need to restore a mutual respect for each other, as well. We need to be able to motivate dancers as to the importance of recruiting, and the necessity of being patient and understanding with the new dancers we do teach.
ID: 399
  
  
  

 
Alternative Music  www.ceder.net   by Vic Ceder  reprinted from Presented to Callerlab.
Suggestions on using Alternative Music with examples.
ID: 441
  
  
  

 
Alternative Patter Music  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker
Patter music can be less structured than singing call music, giving a much larger range of music from which to choose. Often our patter music is more drab and boring than our singing call music. Sometimes this is necessary so that the dancers won't get distracted by the music. However, sometimes it is nice to let accomplished dancers dance to a good piece of music. Music from outside the normal square dance arena is another way of providing variety, getting away from boom-chuck, certain instrumentation, and other constraints we impose upon ourselves.
ID: 414
  
  
  

 
Attitude Is Everything  www.wesquaredance.com   by Jerry Junck
Today's square dance activity is suffering form a great many more negative opinions than positive attitudes. Jerry asks callers, dancers, and even organizations to do some hard thinking about their current attitudes and what positive changes we all can make for the good of square dancing.
ID: 400
  
  
  

 
Beat Math  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker  reprinted from Clark Baker (A Workshop presented at Callerlab 2009)
This workshop will start with a brief review of timing. Next we will discuss a methodology for measuring how many beats a call takes and use this methodology on a few calls to see if it gets the same answer as our existing timing charts. Finally we will see if "beat math" really works. Can we simply stick calls together, adding up their beats, and expect the sequence to dance in that many beats? If not, how are we supposed to use our timing numbers?
ID: 459
  
  
  

 
Caller Judgment  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker  reprinted from A Talk given at Callerlab 2012
A square dance caller makes many decisions while performing his job. Some of these decisions are easy and obvious, especially to experienced callers. Others are not so easy, and different callers may make different decisions when presented with identical situations. Usually the results of a decision are minor, or can be easily fixed. Occasionally the decision has far reaching consequences.
ID: 450
  
  
  

 
Computer Numbers, A History  summersweet.org   by Don Beck  reprinted from The Call Sheet
ID: 480
  
  
  

 
Computer Numbers, What They Are and Why  summersweet.org   by Don Beck  reprinted from Shop Talk
ID: 481
  
  
  

 
Creating A Teaching Order That Will Help Students Succeed  fortytwo.ws   by Don Beck
ID: 420
  
  
  

 
Dancing By Definition  docs.google.com   by Barry Clasper  reprinted from Callerlab 2013 presentation
How the brain's memory and recall mechanisms work and how we can apply that to the way a dancer learns.
ID: 457
  
  
  

 
Do It Again and Again (part 1)  www.ecta.de   by Al Stevens
Repetition all over again.
ID: 323
  
  
  

 
Do It Again and Again (part 2)  www.ecta.de   by Al Stevens
Repetition all over again.
ID: 324
  
  
  

 
Extended Applications (for Callers)  www.ceder.net   by Vic Ceder  reprinted from Presented to Callerlab
Standard applications are those combinations of calls and formations that are most frequently called, and which give a high dancer success rate. When a caller goes beyond this basic 'norm', dancers tend to break down because they are given unfamiliar positions from which to do the call. This article focuses on those Extended Applications, how and when to use them while keeping them fun and attainable.
ID: 442
  
  
  

 
Frequency Counts - Good or Bad?  www.ecta.de   by Al Stevens
ID: 325
  
  
  

 
Gimmicks  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker
I have always felt that there are more than a few types of gimmicks. However I have never taken the time to collect and analyze the various types. Making a presentation on this subject at the 2005 Callerlab meeting has forced me to collect my thoughts and write this paper.
ID: 407
  
  
  

 
Helpful Hints for Callers  www.ecta.de   by Al Stevens
Suggestions that have been made over the years at Al Steven's callers schools.
ID: 322
  
  
  

 
How I Get Square Dance Music  www.all8.com   by Rich Reel
One way to obtain square dance records.
ID: 260
  
  
  

 
My First CALLERLAB  www.danceinfo.org   by Allan Hurst
There's a myth that attending CALLERLAB is only for professional callers. In reality, it's a wonderful opportunity to meet other callers, and to get to know the square dance community at large.
ID: 422
  
  
  

 
Non-Destructive Testing  summersweet.org   by Don Beck  reprinted from The Call Sheet
ID: 482
  
  
  

 
On The Rights of Call Authors  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker
Following some discussion on the square dance caller's e-mail list regarding what rights the author of a square dance call may or may not have, Clark Baker's writes his opinion.
ID: 398
  
  
  

 
Phrase Craze  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker  reprinted from Clark Baker (a workshop presented at the 2010 CALLERLAB Convention)
This workshop will explore the relationship of patter and singing calling to the musical phrase. We start with a brief definition of terms, and move into some dancing. Does a style of delivery in which the caller gives the dancers the first beat in a phrase better? How often can a skilled caller "hit the phrase"? How can you acquire this skill? What are some examples of strongly phrased music. This will be a laboratory in which we are counting on you, as dancers, to help determine which variables really matter.
ID: 458
  
  
  

 
Points for Better Calling  www.all8.com   by Rich Reel
Fundamental aspects of optimal square dance calling.
ID: 247
  
  
  

 
Sight Calling  www.nwcustomwebs.com   by Rob Scribner  reprinted from The Oregon Square Dancer Magazine
A sight-calling primer.
ID: 230
  
  
  

 
Sight Resolution  www.penrod-sq-dancing.com 
Several callers have submitted their methods for sight resolution.
ID: 241
  
  
  

 
Smooth Dancing  gero-teufert.de   by Peter Höfelmeyer
Why should smooth dancing be one of our highest goals?
ID: 291
  
  
  

 
Some Thoughts about Body Flow  gero-teufert.de   by Jens Harms
ID: 292
  
  
  

 
Teaching Order Design Principles  www.callerlab.org   by Dottie Welch and Clark Baker  reprinted from Callerlab Dance Program Documents
ID: 429
  
  
  

 
Teaching Principles That Will Help Students Succeed  fortytwo.ws   by Don Beck
Four phases to teaching, and goals of teaching.
ID: 419
  
  
  

 
Teaching Square Dancing to Grade 7  fortytwo.ws   by Clark Baker
This talk will focus on my experiences in working with 7th graders, teaching a progressive series of classes, leading to a school-wide performance. Areas covered include crowd control, choreography, teaching techniques, handling reluctant dancers, dealing with attitude, a core vocabulary of calls and skills, teaching words, and learning speed. We end with a quick walkthru of calls that look good in exhibition (Stars, Allemande Thar, Grand Square, Dip And Dive, Heel & Toe, Star Promenade & Butterfly Whirl) which you could use in any ONS. Finally we dance the routine to phrased calling.
ID: 432
  
  
  

 
Teaching Techniques  fortytwo.ws   by Jerry Reed
Teaching is one of the most important jobs of any caller. We should be prepared to undertake this task each time we pick up our microphone. Teaching can be as formal as a regular class or workshop situation or as informal as a discussion of a particular move or concept over coffee after a dance. Teaching people to dance is not only one of our most important skills, it is also one of the most difficult.
ID: 439
  
  
  

 
TrashDance (What A Feeling!)  www.danceinfo.org   by Allan Hurst
As a caller ... what do you do when only 6 dancers show up? Get trashy! This article, on how to choreograph and call for 6 dancers plus two wheeled garbage cans, first appeared in the GCA "Call Sheet" Newsletter.
ID: 423
  
  
  

 
What Makes Choreography Difficult (and Why Should We Care)  summersweet.org   by Don Beck
ID: 483
  
  
  

 
What Makes Square Dancing Hard? -- Cognitive Psychology and Square Dancing (1982)  fortytwo.ws   by John Sybalsky  reprinted from Square Dance Practice Vol. 1, No. 4
There are limits to what the human mind can do. Studying those limits---and how people cope with them---can tell us much about what makes square dancing easy or hard: The closer a call or sequence comes to pushing those limits. the harder it is to perform. Looking at how people cope with their limits can tell us much about how people learn square dancing. and thus provide guidance for setting up teaching orders and plateau progressions.
ID: 438
  
  
  

 
Working with Other Callers - Duets  www.ecta.de   by Al Stevens
Duets are a great tool to be used by callers, if two callers are compatible with each other, however a danger exists when two callers are non - compatible. Nothing sounds worse than to listen to two callers trying to work with each other - and can't.
ID: 321
  
  
  

 
Zeros  callers.gero-teufert.de   by Gero Teufert
ID: 293
  
  
  

 

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25-April-2024 16:42:28
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