A square dance program or square dance list is a set of defined square dance calls or dance steps which are associated with a level of difficulty. Programs and program lists are managed and universally recognized in modern Western square dance.
Upper level dance programs include not only square dance calls, but also square dance concepts.
In general, the first three levels are more physically active than the challenge level (often referred to as challenge square dance). Challenge square dance is more cerebral, and focuses on problem solving.
These program lists are not static, and there has always been some occasional adjustment of the programs. Today, the tendency is to reduce the number of steps at Mainstream, the lowest level, so that there is less required learning time to achieve a controlled common level of dancing proficiency.
Callerlab's seven managed dance program lists, as of Aug. 2005, are as follows. After the name of the program is an indication of the number of steps added at each level, and the total number of steps and concepts one is expected to know after having learned the level:
| Dance level | # add'l calls (and concepts) | Total (including lower levels) |
|---|---|---|
| Mainstream | 69 calls | |
| Plus | 31 calls | 100 calls |
| Advanced 1 (A-1) | 46 calls and concepts | 146 calls and concepts |
| Advanced 2 (A-2) | 35 calls and concepts | 181 calls and concepts |
| Challenge 1 (C1) | 79 calls and concepts | 260 calls and concepts |
| Challenge 2 (C2) | 86 calls and concepts | 346 calls and concepts |
| Challenge 3A (C3A) | 83 calls and concepts | 429 calls and concepts |
Advanced 1 and Advanced 2 are treated as one combined program ("Advanced") in some regions; in other areas they are treated as two separate programs.
In the past, Callerlab recognized the first 53 calls of Mainstream as a separate program called "Basic". There are still people who recognize the list and refer to it by its historic name.
Higher level programs are not maintained by any official group, although the National Advanced and Challenge Convention maintained a C3B list until it disbanded in 2000. At the present, the C3B list is informally maintained by consensus of the callers of that program. At the C4 level callers are generally free to use any call or concept they please (subject only to the patience and knowledge of their dancers), but efforts are made to collect and standardize those calls and concepts actually used by practicing callers. A C4 dancer typically knows about 1000 calls and 100 concepts. "Hard" C4 level dancing is sometimes informally called C5.
Other groups of callers advocate even smaller lists for the purpose of reducing the barrier to new people getting involved. Examples include the "ABC" approach which uses 22 calls, the "Club Level 50", and the Danish M23-M45-M53-M69 approach.
The U.S. Handicapable Square Dance Association has defined two lists for use at its conventions, one with 19 calls and a more advanced one with 44 calls.
Having managed program lists allows modern Western square dance to be an international activity.
When a dance is advertised as being a multi-program dance then there are either "tips" or special rooms available for the dancer at the various different programs.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Square dance program".
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