March 28th 2026 – The day I finally took a leap of faith and took my first tentative steps into teaching the fabulous art of bell ringing by joining the ‘M1 Course- Art of Teaching Bell Handling’ held at the rather chilly Holy Trinity Church in Bengeo, Hertfordshire. A superb day seamlessly organised by Claire May from HCACR and led by the wonderfully talented and engaging tutorage of David Sparling and Neil Jones (Tower Captain of Rochester Cathedral and newly elected ART Chair).
Our group of 12 participants was comprised of relative locals, like myself, but with some travelling from as far afield as Kent, Surrey and even Northamptonshire and our ringing/teaching experience was just as varied. However, all came with a common purpose, a love of ringing and a desire to see the continuation of this fantastic art within our communities. We all came with some trepidation and anxiety, and maybe even some fear that naturally comes with stepping out of your comfort zone into unfamiliar realms and especially those that come with the responsibility of imparting the skills needed to develop confident and competent ringers of the future. This course certainly delivered in nurturing our teaching of good bell handling.
With an appropriately balanced blend of theory and practical sessions we were taken gently through the progressive steps of teaching/assisting novice bell ringers to perfect each skill component from feeling the bell, back strokes, hand strokes and transitions leading to putting both strokes together and finally ringing up and down. We worked in groups of 3, changing groups at regular intervals to work with different ringers, in order to gain experience as a ‘hands on the rope’ teacher, as an observer looking for good practice and communications and finally as a ringer . It certainly felt rather awkward not ringing full strokes and consequently led to ringing errors that had to be managed. It kept the teacher on their toes but also made the whole experience very authentic. Both David and Neil were always close at hand to offer valuable feedback at every stage thereby developing our practice and awareness and leading to a feeling of greater confidence , control, and dare I say it, expertise!
Theory sessions highlighted the soft interventions required that make a great teacher, understanding your learner, good communications, clear instructions, encouragement, timely and accurate feedback, mastery of each skill through the employment of the whole-part-whole teaching methodology, positive reinforcement, pace of learning, keeping a ringer safe, engaged and wanting to come back for more. Did we really cover all that in a day? Phew, no wonder I was pleasantly exhausted by the close of the day!
I thoroughly enjoyed my day, including a fab pub lunch and the opportunity to get to know other ringers. I came away excited and full of the enthusiasm and motivation to continue on my pathway to becoming an all-round, proficient teacher. In fact, on arriving home I was in immediate contact with my mentor Steve and found myself the very next day up in our tower going back over what I had learnt, reinforcing every progression and good communication and even finding the confidence to rescue my mentor when he let go of the tail end of the rope without warning. Before the course I would have been running in the opposite direction with a rope flailing around the tower!
I unreservedly and whole heartedly recommend this course, and if you are thinking of beginning your own journey as a teacher please do not hesitate and just do it! You certainly won’t regret it – let’s keep this craft alive and keep the church bells joyfully tolling throughout our land.
With special thanks to Claire May (course organiser), David Sparling (Lead tutor), Neil Jones (Supporting tutor), Mark & Kevyn Hopkins-Hall (Tower Captains and superb hosts)