Perhaps we need to accept that most ringers are not that much into it. They ring every week on a Sunday, they go to a weekly tower practice and the odd outing or association meeting, but that is where it ends for them.
To achieve the modest goal of ringing some rounds and call changes on a Sunday we do not need to progress much beyond ART level 3. We do not need to learn blue lines, to understand bobs, to get to grips with the structures of methods.
Following discussions started in other threads, I have been reviewing the 1988 Survey of Ringing which was a mammoth undertaking that sample surveyed over 500 towers and involved over 75 volunteers. The final report is over 100 pages long.
These 10 questions were posed in the Ringing World in November 1989 and they were due to be debated at an Open meeting of the Council in 1990. What happened as a result of all that survey information? Did any particular strategies come forward as a result? — Simon Linford
Sorry to reopen this thread after so long, — Jason Carter
Sorry to reopen this thread after so long,
— Jason Carter
This topic has popped up again recently and there's quite a long thread on the subject here, which I think you might find interesting.
27 minutes ago — John de Overa
The challenge is doing that in way that matches what ringer want. One purpose of a new survey should be to get a good idea of what that is. — Paul Wotton
In the case of peal ringing this is now quite marked — Roger Booth
we seem to have a squeezed middle, with a missing generation or two of competent change-ringers, and lots of bands struggling to ring plain hunt, let alone steady Plain Bob or Grandsire doubles — Roger Booth
many of those who have recently taken up ringing are keen to make progress, and to become competent change-ringers, as they see it as a rewarding pastime. However nowadays many do not get the same opportunities to meet their aspirations, that their predecessors had. — Roger Booth
do you know if there has also been a change in the stages at which they are rung, e.g. more Minor and less Major — John de Overa
QPs are on my radar but I'm not interested in ringing peals, am I alone or is that a change in preferences .... ? — John de Overa
Older learners take longer and don't get as far" may be true in part but I think it's used as a convenient and self-fulfilling excuse. — John de Overa
do you know if there has also been a change in the stages at which they are rung, e.g. more Minor and less Major? — John de Overa
The difference between young and old is that the young give up if they don't become rapidly competent whereas the old are more persistent so there are more of them to count as struggling. — John Harrison
It's the other way round. First peal's these days tend to be in the higher stages e.g. more major and less minor. — Roger Booth
With the squeezed middle, it is also more difficult than it used to be to find a band — Roger Booth
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