What an excellent day – good teaching, great practicals and loads of support for the future.
Nine of us turned up at St Johns, Ranmoor, a beautiful church; in fact a favourite of Michael Palin. It has a soaring spire, an exquisite interior and an urgent appeal starting that very day to save its spire and tower. We would be based in the ringing room, amply supplied with tea and biscuits, and brilliantly led by our tutor for the day, Heather Peachey.
We had a rich bank of stories of places we’d rung, things we wanted to learn and no end of examples of bad practice in raising, lowering, striking and general bellhandling. What a good job ART was here to rescue us!
Heather helped deconstruct and reconstruct ringing for us. She gave us the big picture, broke it down into chunks, led us through hands on practice of the little chunks, and then pulled it all together again. Including showing us just how bad “bad practice” can be, and how to tackle it in an encouraging way.
ACE, she said – Achievement, Connection, Enjoyment are at the heart of it. We want to make good progress and if we can engender a sense of achievement, a connection between people and do it all in an encouraging way then we can create something that will be great for the learner and great for the teacher.
We had lots of questions and we co-developed lots of answers. Some of the big takeaways for me, and some of what I sense others took away were as follows:
- Start teaching with the bell down. Get familiar with the rope, your stance and the vertical path your hands will follow around a static rope. My word, this was simple yet revelatory. I’ve always started teaching from a bell up – doing backstroke and handstroke from the up position. This new start point was so obvious yet so unexpected.
- Do mirroring before catching. Get into the rhythm of where and when to catch before actually touching the sally.
- Figure of 8 to quickly shorten a rope. You are only one little move away from it, when you’ve stood your bell and looped the tail end round. Me and Simon couldn’t believe it!
This is only a taste of the course. We learnt so much more, but these three things were game changers for me. I’ve also come away with 7 new friends and 2 great re-acquaintances where we can call on each other for ideas as we all ring nearby.
I was particularly inspired by Cal who only took up ringing a year or so ago but was already attending a course on teaching others. Thank you Heather, thank you Ranmoor and thank you ART. I look forward to putting this into practice.