My comments below are not directed to you personally — Phillip George
Do the majority of ringers want to improve their ringing? — Alan C
What is improved ringing, is it ringing what you can with greater accuracy, or ringing more complicated methods (obviously not in Devon and Cornwall), or a combination of both? — Alan C
The best hope would be setting up a separate parallel organisation where the emphasis is on the development of method ringing. ART is part way there — A J Barnfield
never play the 'desparate for new ringers' card — Peter Sotheran
What do you want to achieve in ringing? — Phillip George
I agree that everyone doesn't want to ting S12 or whatever, and most people don't aspire to win competitions, but surely there aspire to some level of performance that gives therm and their audience satisfaction. There has to be San element of fulfilment in the ringing itself, otherwise why do it? If all you want is the social side just go straight to the pub. If all you want is to serve your church, give out hymn books or make the coffee which is much easier, or join the choir where the average standard of performance may be higher.
I don't suppose anyone wants to perform badly, but why people ring is their own business and their motives are not subject to the approval, or otherwise, of others. — Alan C
If bands perform badly, that reflects on their ability rather than their motivation — Alan C
don't suppose anyone wants to perform badly, but why people ring is their own business and their motives are not subject to the a — Alan C
If bands perform badly, that reflects on their ability rather than their motivation, I can't see why you would support ringers differently based on their motivation rather than ability. — Alan C
motivation will be a strong determinant of whether they try to improve their ability ... — John Harrison
I don't think motivation is 'their own business' — John Harrison
Well, from a religious point of view, service ringing is a way of giving glory to God. So somebody who is "just interested in service ringing" ought to be very highly motivated to develop their God-given talent to the utmost. This would be analogous to a great composer composing sublime music for the sung Mass.What would be the point of trying to teach advanced methods to someone who was just interested in service ringing, for example? — John de Overa
I am really hoping Yellow Yoyo will have me dressed in a yellow woolly jumpsuit, bouncing up and down on the end of a bell rope.Ditto. It will be interesting to see if they have grasped (what I perceive as) reality. — A J Barnfield
So somebody who is "just interested in service ringing" ought to be very highly motivated to develop their God-given talent to the utmost. — Barbara Le Gallez
↪A J Barnfield interesting that you frame the constraint on a DMO in terms of the weaknesses of local organisation rather than as a weakness of the CC per se. Your views in that direction are well known but I hadn't linked them directly with the problem of making the transition to a DMO. — John Harrison
Mind you I have been assuming that the marketing will be aimed at non-ringers. If the marketing is to be aimed at guilds, associations, tower captains and ringers in general and if the aim is to get a total shift in the way most think about T&D then I can very much see the point — A J Barnfield
we tend to see ringing, and all its important facets, from our own point of view, which often can be somewhat blinkered.. — Phillip George
more emphasis on encouraging and selecting those who are well suited and likely to do well. — John Harrison
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