When you think one of your ringers has completed one of their Learning their Ropes Levels it is time to do their assessment, complete their Personal Progress Book and order them a certificate.
By the time of the assessment, your ringer needs to have gone through all the practical and theory exercises relevant to their Level. These are listed in the ringer’s Personal Progress Book. If there is a physical/medical reason why they can’t complete one of the exercises, then have a look at the ART Equality Policy and contact ART for help and advice.
Assessment at Levels 3 to 5 is by quarter peal so you need to organise qualifying quarter peals and submit them on SmART Ringer when you progress your ringer through the Level.
Assessment at Levels 1 and 2 requires you to complete a checklist of elements of handling. For Level 1 they must have 11/16 of the elements ticked before they can pass the Level. For Level 2 this increases to 15/16. You do not need an external assessor for them.
You should only tick one of the elements when they’re competent at the skill. That does not mean perfect all the time … it’s understanding what they’re doing and doing it pretty well most of the time. Say someone rings down. You’re happy they’re safe and handle the rope well. You’ve seen a good performance. Occasionally they will still fumble the sally, but recover from it themselves safely. That’s good enough. The bottom line is being safe and in control of the bell, ready to start manoeuvring it in place making etc. We are not seeking perfection.
Try and avoid words like exam and assessment – learning to ring can be hard enough on the new ringer without any additional external pressure. Some teachers just say “I’ve been watching you ringing today and you’ve ticked off enough elements to pass your Level 1. Congratulations. Let’s complete your progress book”. And of course if they’re not quite there, they don’t say anything and return to it at a future lesson.
For level 3, ringers should aim to complete two quarter peals, on the treble to a doubles method and also on the tenor to demonstrate rhythm, steady covering and as a ropesight challenge. If a ringer is very young, or physically too small to handle even a light tenor, there is the option for them to complete a second quarter peal on the treble and teacher may opt to organise this for a different method so that there it isn’t just a duplicate of a similar quarter peal. A ringer with a physical limitation which means they aren’t able to handle heavier bells may also wish to take the option of ringing two quarter peals on the treble, please do contact helpdesk@bellringing.org if you think this applies to someone you are teaching and our equalities panel will try to advise.