Comments

  • Ringing Courses Value-For-Money (RW Letter)
    My purely personal feedback as a tutor at the recent NW course was...
    a) full marks to all the "students" in the Starting Surprise topic, who had actually done all the homework that was set (!) and so were able to make full use of the rope time; all made really great progress.
    b) I agree that some "just one student at a time" is needed, but it really does cut down on each student's ringing time. It also results in what some residential courses complain about - the same students coming back and doing the same thing year after year (as they can ring whatever it is ONLY when surrounded by good ringers ( i.e. the helpers). So I feel that not TOO much "one student only" is worth aiming for.
    c) I was very impressed with the optional extra 'Handling Clinic' sessions. Much more progress made in a short session than typically happens in towers. Not sure why - maybe the different mindset ("seize the opportunity") of those attending?
    d) Value for money? Well, everything is done to keep the cost as low as possible, but residential courses with meals provided are going to cost a fair bit whatever happens. Feedback suggests a very high level of overall satisfaction (but not of course 100%).
  • Sussex bell-ringer who revealed her terminal cancer on Songs of Praise has her story questioned
    I strongly agree with John Harrison - a record of a performance properly rung in good faith should not be removed because of subsequently emerging dodgy connections in its dedication or method name. I have mixed feelings about renaming the method - Julie has not actually been found guilty of anything, and while the whole story has a very bad smell to it, I don't think we should assume guilt when the court has recorded a Not Guilty verdict, even if for very dubious reasons. Currently I feel more anger about the court process then about any crime Julie may or may not have committed.
  • Streaming of teachers?
    This is mostly in reply to John's original post. In many fields, not just ringing, there is if anything a negative correlation between being very good at something and being able to teach it. This is of course a gross generalisation and there are lots of exceptions, but a key aspect of teaching is being able to perceive the level at which the student needs help, and then talk, demonstrate or explain at their level, not at the teacher's level. Many experts are not good at this!

    In the specific case of ringing, I think it helps to distinguish between teaching basic handling (which, although faults do tend to recur after the initial training, is essentially a once-only process) and then the teaching of methods of increasing complexity. Basic handling is mostly taught one-on-one; there is no reason why it should be an expert ringer or the tower captain who does the teaching; it will ideally be done by someone who enjoys teaching, in which case they will not become bored or frustrated or feel restricted by this task (though they may get overloaded). So I suggest that when John talks about "advanced ringers burned out by doing seemingly endless handling, CC and PH training" they are either being overloaded or they are not very good teachers. In my school-teaching days I was often asked if it was not boring to teach the same maths topics year after year, to which the answer is a definite NO - it is different children each year, each class is different, needs different materials and challenges, and one absolutely does not trot out the same resources year after year. You are teaching people, who are endlessly varied, much more than the topic.

    When it comes to methods (and ok yes there is a middle ground of rounds, call changes, plain hunt etc so I am over-simplifying), surely it is more the tower or the group that does the teaching. The student will attend other towers, group practices etc, and while they may on occasion ask their original teacher for comment or assistance, the role of that teacher is very different at these more advanced stages.

    So I totally agree with John's comment "I suspect trying to <get more teachers> by drawing basic teachers from the top 10% of ringers is doomed to fail". Indeed, more often than not they would be the last people you would ask!
  • Central Council less democratic?
    As for the original "is it democratic?" it all depends on your definition of democracy. The key to modern democracies is that the people have the power to boot out the administration if they don't like what it is doing (or, more often, just feel it is time for a change). The people do NOT actually vote on individual decisions (other than, in many democracies, changes to the constitution). So CC pretty much fits this definition of a democracy, and recent changes have made it more able to get things done.

    As several have said, the current challenges are more getting through to and appearing relevant to ringers generally. In this respect it has gone from dreadful not not very good - a significant improvement but a long way to go, and no easy solution. I'd give a B+ "trying hard, a lot of improvement achieved but more needed."
  • Open handstroke and backstroke leads
    One of the Victorian (in the Australian sense!) towers has adopted the convention that call changes are always rung without a handstroke gap, but method ringing always does have a handstroke gap. Interestingly, rather than causing confusion and chaos, this has the opposite effect - people learning there are very aware of what a handstroke gap is, when to apply it, and they don't have the usual problem of tending to insert a backstroke gap when trying to get the hang of a handstroke gap.
  • learning to ring inside
    How are you deciding where to place your bell and how are you achieving this? Ideally you are counting each row, and know what position you should be in (as opposed to, for example, having learnt which bell to ring after, looking at that rope, and coming down after it). You have developed a feel of rhythm, so your hands and arms have got the hang of what you do to ring at constant speed as in rounds, or to hunt up (slower ringing) or down (faster ringing).

    You know the order of work so, after making seconds, you know your next work will be a 3-4 down dodge. So hunt to the back, then down to 3rd position and at that point give a slightly harder pull so you can let your bell rise higher so that you achieve 4th position at the backstroke, thus making the dodge. Listen and count - if you do this it doesn't matter if you can't "see" this dodge (i.e. you are not sure which bell you are dodging with). Of course ideally you will know what position to ring AND ALSO you will be able to see the ropes and so know who to dodge with. However it sounds as though maybe you are finding the ropesight ("seeing" which bell you are dodging with) difficult and worrying. If so, forget the 'seeing" and aim for now to concentrate on counting and listening rather than looking.
  • Public Appreciation of Quality
    I think ringers often over-estimate the degree to which the public appreciate what we call good ringing. Various points:
    Ringing in the background of TV programs featuring an English village generally has dreadful striking; since it's only a sound track, and the director/producer/whoever could pick anything, they presumably have no idea what good ringing is.
    It's often just ringing (anything) that is appreciated. I remember overseas (Taiwan) visitors coming to their daughter's wedding in Melbourne, and they were totally blown away by all aspects of the cathedral wedding. "We especially loved the bells, and really liked that syncopated effect". (If a ringer said that it would be sarcasm, but they really meant it!)
    If we were serious about ringing what the public liked, we would ring (well-struck) call changes - these always seem to be the most popular with non-ringers. And we would seldom ring peals, as they generate the most complaints!
    None of which means I'm in any way against striving to ring more challenging methods with improved striking - but I suspect it is mostly for our own benefit.
  • Bell muffles for Remembrance Sunday, funerals etc
    Many thanks Jonathan and Philip. That's very clear and very helpful. Also exactly what I was hoping would be the case, but it's reassuring to have this confirmed - common sense does not always prevail!
  • Bell muffles for Remembrance Sunday, funerals etc
    I've seen plenty of half muffles, but never seen a full muffle. If one orders full muffles from a supplier, are they usable to either full or half muffle a bell, or are they really only usable to fully muffle?
  • Ringing Forums - Your thoughts?
    I agree with Tim Farnham's comment. There's a good initial range of topics, and I'd favour letting them run for a bit before adding further ones - unless a very definite need is identified. Thanks to those who set this up. :up:
  • Rope spiders
    I agree with Alison. We have alarms and keycards (two!) before you can gain access to the ringing chamber, but a safety audit still suggested a spider and leaving the ropes up when we are not ringing, as an additional precaution. We all agree with this assessment, and in fact have always intended to put in spiders, but just never quite got round to it yet! (Also recommended was an additional padlock controlling access from the ringing chamber to the bell chamber.)

    And yes we always teach testing a bell before ringing it up or down - knots can suggest whether a bell is up or down, but it's a fallible guide! I remember being ticked off (quite rightly) when I was doing a formal assessment of a ringing teacher, when I had a half-made loop in my hand before testing that the bell was down.