as a learner, I really need two practice nights a week, and general practices tended to be a bit of a waste when it was one go at rounds, — Tristan Lockheart
money alone certainly won't. It needs to be intelligently applied to support suitably competent and inspiring people doing useful things. But not being able to spend money when it would help to get things done closes off many options, making it harder to do what is needed when it is needed.I'm not sure money alone would solve the training and retention problem, — John de Overa
it's easy to believe there were halcyon days in the past, but from talking to the old lags, I don't think that was ever really the case - over time different bands in an area rose and fell in ability, and you always had to "get on your bike" if you wanted to progress. The issue now is that such informal "centres of excellence" are becoming rarer, and even more thinly spread. Existing areas with strong ringing aren't the problem, it's the "centres of mediocrity", or even worse "ringing graveyards" that really need the help. My concern is that it will be all to easy to direct funding and resources to areas that don't really have a problem, as they will be the easiest to identify and will be more active in pushing for funding. — John de Overa
What made the difference was a new TC and one returning retiree ringer - those relatively small and internal to the band changes tipped the balance. What we could do with is help maintaining that new impetus. — John de Overa
But you relied on the good will of towers and a helpful informal mentor or three to help you on your way. A lot of luck was needed and it was all very hit and miss. I don't recall the local association being any use at all. — A J Barnfield
A couple of decades back there were still enough capable ringers who were young enough that it might have been possible to set up some formal T&D structures. Now the core of capable ringers is probably too small in number and rather elderly and in any case it looks like folk are generally trying to flog on with the old tower based model. There has been a bit of tinkering with a few clusters and some co-operation but the wholesale structural reform that was needed has not happened. — A J Barnfield
I also agree that the old tower-based model seems no longer viable, but people are wedded to their little fiefdoms, I guess. — John de Overa
I think it is possible to get motivated people across The Great Divide, but I think it needs to be done in a considered and structured way, in the same way that handling is now taught. — John de Overa
I imagine that there is a bulge of the sort of person who is able to help progress a band into methods around the older age groups. If we had a previous census from 10 or 20 years ago, we could see if they are being replaced as they age out. Do you think they are being replaced, or are the numbers with those skills declining? — Tristan Lockheart
Sounds like Districts and Associations need to be helping with the signposting. — Tristan Lockheart
Yes, I have found my best progress to be on structured schemes; the traditional deep-end or just-do-it methods rarely do me much good. — Tristan Lockheart
What was disappointing was that each student in my group (and I suspect many of the others) came because they met a barrier to their progress in their own tower, and even after the course, they would have very limited opportunities to ring their chosen method afterwards. — Roger Booth
After the course the organisers set up a WhatsApp group for us all to keep in touch. In my feedback I suggested that as there are other similar courses (Hereford, Essex, Bradfield etc) what would be useful would be to link up with them and set up regional WhatsApp groups for each of the subjects, so that students could get together with other like minded people and practice what they were learning on the course. — Roger Booth
ART has just held its second successful Learning the Ropes day for people at the lower end, but wouldn't this be a good way of harnessing new ways of working to help remove the barriers for people further up the ladder? — Roger Booth
I'm not sure the purpose needs to change. I see our branch purpose as to help provide the opportunities and services that members can't get from their own bands, and which the Guild is too remote to provide.the ethos and purpose of districts/associations needs to change radically f — John de Overa
Sadly we rarely get such requests, presumably because only those towers that can organise their own quarters are interested in ringing at all. — John Harrison
The problem is achieving that purpose in the face of (a) limited resources and (b) low desire of many members to avail themselves of such services, even when offered. — John Harrison
What we are doing is working for some of our members, but not all of our members want to be helped.If it isn't working, why are you still doing it?
You've exactly illustrated my point, branches / associations carry on doing the same thing over and over and are apparently puzzled why something that didn't work for the last 10 years still doesn't work this year. — John de Overa
What we are doing is working for some of our members, but not all of our members want to be helped. — John Harrison
I see our branch purpose as to help provide the opportunities and services that members can't get from their own bands — John Harrison
Agreed. We promote 'quarter in every tower' events not as progression but to encourage as many as possible to feel engaged by taking part in major events. The first was for our centenary and others have been for national ringing events. We do have an annual QP week in the diary, but that's just to act as a gentle jog to bands that occasionally ring quarters and might like a focus.Taking the QP week case ... it's pretty pointless in terms of their progression — John de Overa
Of course the commercial model isn't viable. — Roger Booth
these training days are often once a year, they are likely to come back to the same group next year — Roger Booth
you probably need to go on two of these courses to to turn a call change ringer who rings with a weak local band into someone who can confidently hunt the treble to QP standard, or progress from this to ringing their first QP inside etc. — Roger Booth
(if they haven't given up in the mean time!) — Roger Booth
in my experience the majority come because they can't do what they want to learn in their own tower — Roger Booth
Those who come from weak bands can then take them back to their own towers to help improve the tuition for the others there. — Roger Booth
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