Tag Archives: DFSC

“Skate Low, Score High”

Title: “Skate Low, Score High”

General Information about Item:

  • Folklore: Verbal – slogan, good luck wish
  • Language: English
  • Origin: United States

Informant Data:

  • Sarah Harris was born in 1996 in Chicago, Illinois. When she was 3 years old, her parents signed her up for skating lessons. Skating was an integral part of her childhood, as she skated 6 days a week. She competed in many skating competitions during middle school and high school. Currently, Sarah is pursuing a History and Government major at Dartmouth. She is also on the Dartmouth Figure Skating Club.

 

Social Context/Cultural Context:

  • The phrase “Skate low, score high” is a reference to one of the team-based events during a specific skating competition that the Dartmouth Figure Skating Club had participated in in the past. In every competition, there are three team-based events (low, middle, and high), based on skating ability. For each event, up to five skaters from the team perform up to 6 elements in total. At the specific competition that took place in the past, Dartmouth’s “Low” team, consisting of 4 skaters, scored first place, thus giving birth to the slogan “Skate low, score high,” referring to the “low” team “scoring first place.” Since that competition, the saying “skate low, score high” has been adopted by the team and is said by skaters to to fellow team members who are about to get onto ice for an event at a competition as a way of saying good luck.
  • This piece of folklore was collected during an interview about DFSC with Sarah at Dartmouth College’s King Arthur Cafe inside Baker Library.

 

Item: “Skate Low, Score High!”

DFSC's "Low Team" which won 1st place multiple times at competitions, coining the phrase "Skate Low, Score HIgh"

DFSC’s “Low Team” which won 1st place multiple times at competitions, coining the phrase “Skate Low, Score High”

Audio Clip:

Transcript of audio:

  • “People also said, uhm, ‘skate low, score high,’ which is a reference to the low team event and them winning that often.”

Informant’s Comments:

  • When asked on her interpretation of the phrase, she responded that the phrase is another way of saying good luck and motivate the team.

Collector’s Comments:

  • Sarah mentioned how the phrase “skate low, score high” is comparable to a good luck wish. In a way, it is similar to magic spell in the sense that skaters evoke and remember the past success they’ve had during a certain competition and subsequently try to channel that success that success into the present performance.

Collectors: Yun Yue Chen and John Gilmore

Tags/Keywords:

“Skate low, score high,” Dartmouth Figure Skating

Green Ribbon

Genre and Sub Genre:

Material Folklore: Superstition, Contagious Magic

Language: English

Country where Item is from: USA

Informant Data:

Ellen Louise Smalley ’19 is currently a sophomore at Dartmouth College. She is from Minneapolis, Minnesota. She originally decided to start figure skating at the age of 4 or 5, and was the first in her family to begin skating. She was told to skate by her physical therapist due to her short achilles tendons. She began skating at Dartmouth’s Figure Skating Club due to the recommendation of Vanessa Szalapski ’12 and Maria Spertudo ’14.

Contextual Data:

  • Social: Informant was interviewed by John Gilmore at Dartmouth College’s Novack Cafe. The informant was asked to talk about figure skating folklore unique to the club.
  • Cultural Context: Informant began skating at age 4 or 5 as a way to stretch her short achilles tendons without running.  She encountered this piece of folklore during her time as a member of DFSC.

Item:

Green Ribbon

Skaters & Sloopy wearing the Green Ribbon

Associated Audio:

Transcript:

Ellen: “Yeah, yeah, I like this. I don’t know, I think its pretty fun. I still have the ribbon on my backpack from nationals.”

John: “Can you tell me more about that?”

Ellen: “I can’t remember. I think we were all going on ice for the awards, I think it was when it was. I think we all put the ribbons in our hair, or Alex and i think you wore them on your wrists, or I don’t know, I don’t know, what you did on your head. Um, But yeah. And then we all kept, I know Isabelle and Anna keep it on their backpacks, and I think Clara does too. And I have mine on my backpack”

Informant’s Comments: Ellen describes the origin story of the Green Ribbons that are worn by all of the team.

Collector’s Comments: The green ribbons commonly worn by the Dartmouth Figure Skating Team originate from a recent trip to nationals. They now continue to wear these ribbon on their backpacks as good luck charms. It is a form of homeopathic magic.

Tags/Keywords:

  • Green Ribbon, Superstition, Contagious Magic

Collector:

Jonathan Meng

Secret Psych

Title: Secret Psych

Genre: Customary, Tradition

Language: English

Country where Item is from: USA

Informant Data: Regina Yan ’19 is currently enrolled at Dartmouth College. She was born in Eden Prairie, Minnesota and moved to Overland Park, Kansas when she was seven. In addition to being on the Dartmouth Figure Skating Team, Regina is also an active member of the Dartmouth Outing Club and a leader in the Dartmouth Mountainering Club. Regina began to skate when she was 10 years old after watching the 2006 Torino Olympics. She skated for five years with the Silver Blades Skating Club but due to health problems, stopped skating in high school. She began again her freshman year at Dartmouth College.

Social/Contextual Data: Informant was interviewed alone at Dartmouth College. The informant was asked to talk about figure skating folklore in relation to the Dartmouth Figure Skating Club.

Regina encountered this piece of folklore in the spring term of her freshman year at Dartmouth College. An email outlining Secret Psych was sent out to the skating team. An upperclassman then explained it to her in depth later.

Item:

A week leading up to any major competition, each skater is secretly assigned another skater to anonymously give small gifts, posters, and encouraging notes to. Your “secret psycher” – the one giving you gifts – is revealed on the push ride up to competition.

Transcription of Interview:

“A week before competition, everyone is assigned a skater to give encouraging messages, gift baskets, posters, and general support to anonymously. On the bus to competition, it is revealed who your secret skater is.”

Informant’s Comments: 

Gifts typically include candy, flaire, posters on doors, and stuffed animals. Small notes of encouragement are often secretly slipped to the recipient.

Collector’s Comments:

This practice is very similar to the popular tradition of “Secret Santa.” The point of this practice is to psych the other skater up so that they become excited and ready competition.

After the interview, Regina remembered the proper name of the folklore item, “Secret Psych” not “Secret Skater”

Collectors: Samuel Lee

Tags/Keywords:

  • Dartmouth Figure Skating Club, DFSC, Tradition, Secret Psych, Secret Santa