Practical Guide To Debating
Practical Guide To Debating
Practical Guide To Debating
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Debating
Worlds Style/
British Parliamentary Style
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Debating
Worlds Style/
British Parliamentary Style
Neill Harvey-Smith
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Published by:
International Debate Education Association
400 West 59th Street
New York, NY 10019
Copyright 2011 by International Debate Education Association
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/deed.en_US
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Contents
Introduction 1
Debate 1
Worlds Style 2
The Growth of Worlds Style 4
The Power of Worlds Style 5
Getting Started 7
Basic Skills 8
Experience Debates 11
Formal Debate Mechanics and Language 11
Developing a Successful Club 15
2 How to Debate
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Preparation Time 20
Definition 23
Case 26
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Role 29
Arguments 33
Types of Argument 34
Principles 38
Practicalities 40
Consequences 42
Making Arguments Well 44
Clash 47
Rebuttal 53
Even if . . . 55
Points of Information (POIs) 56
Manner 59
Style 59
Structure 62
Framing and Language 64
3 How to Adjudicate
67
Adjudicators 68
Setup 69
Mindset 71
The Government of What? 76
Recording the Debate 79
Overcoming Bias 80
The Long Diagonal Bias 80
Guilt by Association 83
Entering the Debate 84
Deliberation 86
Verbal Adjudication 94
Adjudication and ESL 97
Analysis Debates 100
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4 Entering Competitions
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103
5 Holding Competitions
117
Contents
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Conclusion 153
Variety 153
Expertise 154
Opportunity 155
APPENDIXES
A Online Resources
159
B Definitional Challenges
161
167
181
Glossary 183
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Introduction
Debate
People have always argued. From the ancient polis to the modern
pub, differences of opinion have been a central part of how men and
women define themselves and interact with others. Whether for
self-expression in the social arena or as the prelude to a duel, words
have always had bite. They can resolve disagreements and they can
accentuate them.
Debate is a particular form of argument. It is not a way of reconciling differencesthat is a misconception. Debate is a way of arbitrating between differences. The purpose of a debate is not for two
disputing parties to leave the room in agreement. Instead, through
the debate between them, others will form a judgment about which
of the two to support.
Debate recognizes that people are capable of disagreeing on
everything about which it is possible to hold an opinion. It relishes
those conflicts and provides a means by which to agree on common action. While the contrasts are often extreme and the language
forceful, the process is consensual and peaceful.
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Worlds Style
The form of debate this book discusses is Worlds Style (WS) debating, currently the most popular, most international and fastestgrowing format of competitive debate. It is the format used in the
World Universities Debating Championships (known informally as
Worlds) and underpins hundreds of other competitions every year,
so by learning it, you can enter a global debate community.
What I refer to throughout this book as Worlds Style is normally termed British Parliamentary (BP) debate, which grew out
of the traditions of the United Kingdom Parliament in Westminster
and follows some of the conventions of the House of Commons. A
Government and Opposition face each other. The order of speeches
crosses the house, alternating between each side. There are Points
of Information, similar to the interventions that members of Parliament permit each other to make. The motion is worded This
House and treated like a bill that will either pass into law or fail. In
1994, the World Universities Debating Council decided to adopt
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British Parliamentary as the style for all future World Championships. This decision led, eventually, to the growth of WS debate
worldwide.
Over the last decades, British Parliamentary style has changed
dramatically. In the mid-nineties, intervarsity debating competitions in BP style predominantly had five-minute speeches, open
motions (broad, ambiguously worded motions that could apply to
a wide range of topicsfor example, This House Would Rather Be
Shaken Than Stirred), judging based greatly on manner, no adjudicator feedback, black-tie finals, and a pervasive culture of heavy
drinking.
None of this would be recognizable to most debaters of the present day. The form of debate codified for Worlds has clearly defined
motions, seven-minute speeches, and feedback after the first seven
rounds. It has a stable set of rules that have remained unaltered
for well over a decade, giving an amazing continuity of learning
materials and adjudication expertise that make it especially rewarding. With long-standing rules and structures to level the playing
field between debaters, Worlds Style is highly suitable for speakers of English as a second language whatever their level of English
proficiency.
Worlds Style is both a sport, with competitions taking place
all over the world, and retains something of the art of debate, with
mannerstyle and structuregiven consideration alongside
matter.
As Worlds has grown, so the rules of debating have standardized.
Debaters have increasingly chosen to attend tournaments that will
prepare them for the pinnacle of competition. These tournaments
are more international and yet more homogeneous. Standardization
has extended to adjudication. Matter and volume of argumentation
have counted for more as the years have passed. Assessing manner
has been treated with suspicion by some, partly out of a positive
desire to avoid discrimination against speakers whose first language
is not English.
Introduction
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Rules only tell you so much about the real experience of debating in Worlds Style, however. You are reading a practical guide that
aims to help you debate now. In the following pages, I will share the
conventions of modern Worlds Style debate.
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Angola, Malawi, and Swaziland. In the Caribbean and Latin America, WS debates and debaters can be found in Barbados, Trinidad
and Tobago, Jamaica, Peru, and Venezuela.
Online debate is also growing, with a World Online Debating
Championships involving debaters from every continent held annually in WS.
Introduction
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Getting Started
n life, many of us have a tendency to avoid doing something publicly until we are satisfied that we are really good at it. When learning another language, we can be reluctant to speak until our accent
is just right. Giving a presentation, we want every word written
down just in case we forget.
Debate is something you learn by doing. There are a thousand
resources and rules that you could read before standing up and
speaking for the first time. Ignore themthey will overload you.
The first step to debating well is becoming confident at standing up
and speaking in public.
The prime necessity is people. Initially, you need enough people
to have two sides and an audience. That could be no more than three
people! One person in favor, one against, and one person deciding
who was more persuasive.
Then your club will grow. So long as you have the same number
of speakers on each side, you can have 1 v 1, 2 v 2, 3 v 3, or 4 v 4,
with the people left over judging the debate. Divide a group of eight
into two teams of three, with two judgesalternate the speeches
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Basic Skills
The wrong way to learn how to debate is to write a speech in full
and then read it out. The right way can be summarized as SALSA:
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Getting Started
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Experience Debates
Whenever you get the chance to speak, take it. If your club allows
floor speeches, make a contribution, however short. If you have a
training session, volunteer even if the subject is not one of your
favorites.
If that isnt possible, remember that you dont have to speak in
a debate to learn about debating. When you hear other speakers,
reflect on what they are saying, enjoy the experience of having them
try to persuade you, and consider what works for you.
Ensure that everyone in your club, however inexperienced, gets
a chance to adjudicate debates. If you havent been asked, volunteer! Listening, weighing the issues, and engaging with experienced
judgesa great way to learn.
Read a quality newspaper or news website every day to get a
handle on global issues. Debate motions can be about anything from
politics and economics to culture and sports. Dont just mine news
sources for information, but think critically about the issues and
the different viewpoints involved. As your awareness grows, you
will start to make connections and see subtle distinctions within a
whole range of events.
If you cant get to attend live debates by experienced debaters,
then use the Internet. Look up debates on Google and YouTube
WUDC is the usual abbreviation for Worldsand see how champion debaters operate. By no means copy them, but watch and see
how persuasive you find them. Consider adopting those techniques
that you like and admire into your own style, but make sure you
keep your own authentic voice.
Getting Started
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Opening Opposition
1. Prime Minister
3. Deputy Prime Minister
Closing Government
Closing Opposition
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speed, not because of them. The best debaters, like the best communicators in any field, have a voice that is authentically theirs.
Getting Started
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Getting Started
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How to Debate
n one sense, the answer is You stand up, and you start talking. In
another, more important sense, the answer is a very long way from
that. A lot of mental groundwork should be laid before a single word
is uttered. Your task is not just to make sense. It is to tell a story that
gives an account of the whole debate, showing how the sides bind
together and where your case fits into the whole.
It takes skill. Sometimes you speak first, sometimes eighth.
From these different vantage points, you need to keep command
of your case, the arguments you support, those you reject, back-up
positions, how it all fits together. When you make or reject arguments, you must do so with rigor and clarity. You need to structure
your speech and deliver it with style. You have to learn to handle
situations, respond to the brilliance or failures of others, and keep
listening to the debate while developing your own thoughts. You
need to commit to your speech at the last possible moment to ensure
that you are relevant. So, before you stand up and start talking, sit
down, start thinking, and get listening.
This chapter will help you make best use of preparation time.
It will teach you how to define a motion to create a clear debate. It
will show how to build a case and to adapt to your unique role in the
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Preparation Time
The hall goes quiet. The Chief Adjudicator announces that the final
will start in 15 minutes. Everyone stares at the PowerPoint, waiting.
Words jump out of the screen. You realize that you only have a quarter of an hour to make sense of the motion, think up a case, come up
with great arguments, consider what others will say, and put it all
together. And hundreds of people are watching. Gulp.
To those who have never debated or those used to styles where
speakers get a week for research, the short period available to think
through your speech is the most astonishing aspect of WS debating. How can people talk about an unfamiliar topic with so little
preparation?
The answer is to use your time effectively. The only resources
at your disposal are 1) your partner and 2) any written material you
brought with you. The rules clearly prohibit conferring with anyone
else, whether they are your coach, your Mom, your best friend, or an
international law expert on the phone. You are not allowed to search
for information on the Internet or use any electronic device at all.
This rule has only two exceptions. If you genuinely cannot
understand a word or phrase in the motion, you should seek clarification from the person who announced it. At a tournament, this will
be the Chief Adjudicator or one of her deputies. Second, if English is
your second language, you are normally allowed to use an electronic
dictionary to check the meaning of words that others use or that you
want to use in your speech.
You and your partner need to work together to make the best use
of your valuable time. Exactly how you use the time will depend on
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How to Debate
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Definition
Defining the motion is a task unique to Opening Government. It is
done by the Prime Minister, early in her speech, and, once accomplished, it replaces the original wording of the motion. Any attempts
How to Debate
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by other teams to return to the sentence read out by the Chief Adjudicator are invalid once a satisfactory definition has been made.
As the rules put it:
The definition should state the issue (or issues) for debate
arising out of the motion and state the meaning of any terms
in the motion which require interpretation.
Usually, the definition gives an adequate starting point for the
debate. Lets consider the motion This House Would Ban the Physical Punishment of Children by Parents. The Prime Minister starts
her speech by saying:
A parent who smacks their childs arm to keep her from immediate danger is acting out of necessity. A parent who smacks
their child as a physical punishment, for something they did in
the past, is acting out of cruelty. Children should be protected,
through a new law, from this abuse by adults of their power.
This opening makes clear what the PM means by physical punishment. She distinguishes between a smack to avoid immediate
danger and a smack given later in chastisement.
She is sketchy on the details of the new law; we dont know what
happens to parents who are convicted. Also, no attempt has been
made to delineate the ages of children covered, so we might presume
coverage stretches from birth to 16 or perhaps 18. But the definition
is fair and does the job.
Other teams are now bound by this definition. Closing Government cannot say, We are only talking about parents who beat their
children with belts or other implements, because Opening Government made clear that just a smack, when given in punishment, was
sufficient to break their new law.
Opening Opposition cannot fairly say, You will be putting
parents in prison for keeping their children out of dangerous situations, because the Prime Minister made an exception in cases of
immediate danger and did not establish whether prison is an option.
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How to Debate
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Case
Every team, in every debate, should have a case. Their case is the
story that they tell about the debatewhat it is about, how the different viewpoints fit together, and why the judges should accept
what they are saying about it. All the great debates I have seen contained four teams that each had a persuasive claim on these questions. Put simply, every team has their own story of why they have
won the debate.
Technically, a case is a policy, course of action, or state of affairs
that a team supports and the reasons for which they support it.
When Opening Government lays out the first component at the
start of the Prime Ministers speech, it is called their definition.
Opening teams must present a case that must include both policy
and reasons. Closing teams support the same policy as their corresponding opening teams but for new reasons.
The overwhelming majority of debaters, in my experience, do
not understand or accept the importance of having a case. Time
after time in my role as an adjudicator, debaters have stared at me
with mystified incomprehension as I explained that their case was
weak. Often they have put to me that their arguments were excellent, that their rebuttal was incisiveas if those were the only two
measures of debating excellence. One such heartbroken debater
came to me after losing an Oxford semifinal and pleaded but we
had, like, eight solid arguments. They only had, like, five.
Giving feedback to such people is like asking someone why they
didnt come to your costume party and being toldYeah, but I
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How to Debate
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It is not just that they are new points and the rules say you have to
make points that are new. It is specifically because the Opposition
is claiming intervention will cause bloodshed that Closing Government wants to prove, in the long run, the opposite.
In her mind, the adjudicator now has Johns team clocked as the
consequences team or the better life team. Knowing what the
team is trying to persuade her of, the adjudicator has a way of assessing how successful the team is. If good arguments are made that
support the prospect of averting humanitarian disaster and creating
a better life, this team may have done well.
Why only may have done well? Because the case put to the
adjudicators by Closing Government is based on Opening Oppositions claim that invading Barbaria will have negative consequences.
Doing well on these consequences will likely place Closing Government ahead of Opening Opposition.
But let us assume that Closing Opposition makes moral arguments against the invasion of Barbaria, claiming that international
law must be upheld whatever the consequences and backing up this
case with detailed argument. What is then essential is that the Government Whip says something in response to the Closing Opposition case. He could claim that customary international law cannot
help with this specific case, reject international law outright, show
how the governments proposed actions fit within international law,
or argue that the positive consequences make invasion worthwhile
whatever international law says on paper. Whatever approach he
takes, it is critical that he spend time explaining not only what he
thinks about international law, but how important it is in this debate
and why military action is still right in light of the new Opposition
arguments.
If he does this, Closing Government will be doing very well. If he
doesnt, then he has nothing more than a list of arguments. However
sparkling and well delivered, they lose relevance if they say nothing
about the new challenge posed by Closing Opposition.
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So, the foundation of a case is a central statemente.g., Military intervention will prevent humanitarian disaster and create a
better life for the peoplewhich is supported by your arguments.
If you were forced to summarize the entirety of both Closing Government speeches in a single sentence (an excellent discipline!), this
is the sentence you would come up with.
Upon that foundation, you need to show how your statement fits
in with the other competing cases in the debateso in addressing
Closing Opposition in our Barbaria debate, the Government Whip
may say, An unclear and flawed body of international law, which
spoke both ways in the cases of Kosovo and Iraq, should not take
precedence over a clear analysis on the effects of military action
and inaction.
Every speech you give should tell a story about the debate, creating a narrative and inviting the adjudicators to share it. Every time
you speak, you should justify what you put in, and leave out, on
grounds of relevance. As an adjudicator, whenever I hear debaters
say they have three arguments and list them, the questions in my
head are: Why those three arguments?To what end?What is
your case?
Making a good case requires you to have thought comprehensively about the issues around a topic. Before you get into arguments, counterarguments, rebuttal, Points of Information, think:
Role
The other factor that will determine the shape of your case is your
role or position in the debate. Each team has a subtly distinct set of
required tasks to fulfill.
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Position
Speaker 1
Speaker 2
Opening Government
Opening Opposition
Closing Government
Closing Opposition
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new and important. The first speaker must not only talk about the
proposal brought by Opening Government but the case of Closing
Government as welland find time to lay out their own case. The
second speaker is strictly a summary speaker, drawing together the
threads of the debate, demonstrating that the Opposition won and
that Closing Opposition had the best case.
Once your case is settled and your role understood, it is time to
consider arguments.
Arguments
If you have just flipped through the book until you reached this
page, you are a typical debater! Argumentslogical points supporting a caseare the building blocks of a speech and debaters
feel comfortable only when they have plenty of them.
For the final of the Edinburgh IV in 2001, I set the motion This
House Would Allow Parents to Decide How to Split Maternity and
Paternity Leave. One of the finalists, a seasoned debater, surprised
to encounter a topic he hadnt considered before, paced the corridors in an agitated state asking passersby, aloud, What are the
arguments?
Around that time, there was a brief vogue for toting a book titled
Pros and Cons that contained arguments on a wide range of topics.
The fashion for cramming arguments ended because it didnt
work. You cant just identify the arguments on any topic and recite
them. A speech is not just a collection of individual arguments, any
more than a novel is just a collection of chapters.
Arguments work when they are deployed in furtherance of a
case or, as the rules put it, matter should be relevant, logical and
consistent. Not just logical and consistent, but relevant. As we have
seen, your case is the standard by which adjudicators assess your
arguments. It is not the number of points you make nor even their
How to Debate
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quality, but the point they together prove that persuades others and
will win you debates.
So, as you sit with your teammate and a blank sheet of paper
during preparation time, before you start writing arguments, write
down your casea single sentence that sums up what you will bring
to the debate.
That done, feel free to brainstorm arguments. Just pour out ideas
without assessing them. Be creative. Once you have exhausted these
original ideas, take a look at your list in light of your case. The questions you and your partner need to ask yourself are:
Are any of them linked? If so, put them together. (e.g., three
about the effects of invading Barbaria on the region)
Are any of them inconsistent? (e.g., two about moral values, one
saying that freedom is paramount, the other social cohesion)
Types of Argument
Once you have decided which arguments to deploy, cross-check
against the different types of argument on this list.
Argument
Type
Question
Problem
Policy
Principles
Practicalities
Consequences
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Your case should say something about all five of these big questions. Think of their absence as trip wires preventing your case
from being accepted by the adjudicators. Let me demonstrate this
by working backward.
Debater (says):
The minority peoples of Barbaria will be freed from an oppressive
regime and able to embrace real democracy, just as the people of
Iraq and Afghanistan now elect their governments. In many ways
a successful democratic transition is more likely. There is a recent
tradition of democracy, a strong trade union movement, underground opposition parties, and a civil society that has remained
surprisingly robust despite recent oppression, as seen in the recent
Million March for freedom.
Adjudicator (thinks):
Yes, thats all very plausible but Barbaria has developed
nuclear weaponswe cant possibly invade.
The speaker has made a persuasive argument about the consequences of a successful invasion. But the team hasnt yet done the
groundwork of proving an invasion would be successful. Lets revisit
the speech.
Debater (says):
It is widely accepted that Barbaria has acquired a nuclear capability. But because the country lacks the missile technology to
launch a warhead, Barbaria is not yet in a position to use its
weapons against an invader. Independent analysts like IARA
claim that the development of nuclear weapons is due to fears
about the relative weakness of their armed forces. And the very
weakness of its armed forces that led to nuclear development will
make it easier for our mission to succeed.
The minority peoples of Barbaria will be freed from an
oppressive regime and able to embrace real democracy, just as
the people of Iraq and Afghanistan now elect their governments.
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How to Debate
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Principles
The default moral position for many debaters is a utilitarian position. Utilitarians believe that the value of actions derives solely from
their consequences. If a course of action leads to more benefits than
costs, the suggestion is that we are compelled to follow it. Killing
one terrorist with a bomb will save one hundred innocent people, so
lets go ahead and do it. If we accept this reasoning, our arguments
about principles and consequences all merge into the same set.
Taking other moral positions creates difficulties. If we feel
moved to appeal that life is sacred, so killing that one person is
just wrong, we might fairly be asked on what basis we make that
claim. Deriving moral authority from Gods commandments makes
it difficult to engage with those who deny that authority.
Human rights might be invoked as the basis for restraint in this
case. But debaters opposite may be all too happy to reject the existence of human rights and challenge you to prove they exist. If you
are relying on natural law, where does that come from?
We might appeal to Kantian principles, arguing that this
extreme example of one versus one hundred should not divert us,
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that we must treat people as ends, not means, and behave in the way
we would will the universal moral lawnot killing the terrorist.
I would encourage you to learn and understand a range of moral
positions, thinking through their foundations. It will help you to
become more persuasive when articulating the reactions that many
average reasonable people feel when encountering a case that entails
death and suffering.
I would also encourage you to engage critically with the utilitarian norm in debating. To Killing one person will save one hundred, so lets go ahead and do it, you might ask, Where do you get
the idea that all lives are of equal worth? You could point out as
utilitarians, you surely believe that if those hundred innocent deaths
caused a backlash that rooted out terrorism for good, then it would
be better to save the terrorist and let the innocent hundred die.
In the end, barring divine intervention, no definitive resolution
of differences in principle can be reached. But you can take three
actions to make your principled case stronger:
1. Demonstrate that you are comfortable in your moral code, whatever that may be, and can work it down to its foundations. If your
natural law defense of human rights is attacked, showing that
you understand the difference between killing and murdering, and its relevance here, will strengthen your argument.
2. Challenge the alternative moral code, demonstrating its perverse effects in its own terms as well as the reasons it fails in your
terms. Utilitarianism is ripe with possibility here. It is great at
telling you the score but very bad at telling you what it is measuring. Note that concepts like innocence and guilt have no
place in utilitarian thinking, which derives all value from consequences. Your opponents, lazily labeling their point as utilitarian as a nod to intellect, may be surprised to be put on the
defensive: The same utilitarian reasoning says you should kill
yourself and give your organs to save the lives of otherswhy
are you still here? What makes a terrorist different?
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3. Root your case in specific examples that are of central importance to the debate. While there are cases of police shooting
suspected terrorists in error, the scenario of the terrorist with the
ticking bomb has not yet arisen in real life. If the whole debate
is about the latter example, it will shape the ethical discussion
by excluding the real-world side effects of a shoot-to-kill policy.
Remember that your principles are there to enlighten the debate.
The debate is not a thought experiment in which to explore the
principles.
Practicalities
It is tempting to jump from policy to consequences, just as advertising tells us that buying sneakers will change our lives. The ethical questions about how the shoes are made are airbrushed away
in an ad. The practical considerationsthat I cant run half a mile
without stopping, that I dont want to spend $100 on footwearare
similarly swept aside. In a debate, these nagging questions remain.
Weve looked at principles. Now lets consider practicalities.
Worlds Style debates are about policy. The question at stake is
whether a government or some other body should take a particular
course of action. Any action runs the risk of failure. Therefore, an
appreciation of what is involved in the implementation of a policy
is important to any debater.
Practicalities are always relevant but rarely decisive in a WS
debate. Every idea has its weaknesses, every plan its faults. An unanswerable proposition would be undesirable in a debate. In fact, if
Opening Government suggests taking action that has no reasonable
opposition, that definition can be challenged by their opponents
and penalized by the adjudicators.
The mark of inexperienced debaters is that they focus heavily
on practicalities. In opening opposition to This House Would
Take a Risk for Peace in the Middle East, their eyes light up
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whenever references are made to negotiations or peaceful coexistence between Israel and Palestine. First, the two sides wont agree.
Second, extremists wont be bound in. Third, it will take ages and
lose momentum.
These are genuine concerns. But debaters should be judicious
about how far they push this line. The troubles in Northern Ireland were intractable until all parties came to an agreement that
brought peace and political change. History is full of conflicts that
have ended, enemies who have learned to live in peace.
So, alongside an insistence that something wont work, you need
to consider a couple of possibilities.
First, what if you are wrong? This is a question I always put to
teams who hang a great deal on their practical arguments. These
even if . . . arguments are really important to make during the
debate. Even if you were able to persuade the leadership of Hamas
to publicly recognize the state of Israel, it would lead to fractures
within the movement and end up causing greater violence. As with
any argument, you need to back up your point with reasoning and
evidence. You do not have to choose between criticizing practicalities and arguing about the consequences predicted by your opponents. But use even if . . . to pivot from your worldview to theirs
and back again.
Second, even if you are right, what does it matter? Even if both
sides agree that no peaceful resolution is possible, there is room for
a wide-ranging debate about how the various sides should behave
in light of that fact. History does not stop because peace is not currently attainable. Peace is not the only possible measure of success
unless the debaters have all stumbled into being utilitarians. Is
it morally better, in the absence of peace, that settlement building
continue, that Hamas remain in control of Gazanot Is it conducive to peace? but Is it right? Does the principle of restraint
have any value?not instrumentally, but as a guiding principle of
human conduct?
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Consequences
In Worlds Style debates, the Government advocates change. This
opens up a plethora of possible consequences. Like a pebble falling
into a pond, any case you drop into the room will have ripple effects.
When you talk about consequences, think about the positives
and the negatives. Make tactical concessionsrather than assuming that everything on your side is rosy and that the other side is
paving the way to hell like some one-eyed politician. Picking out
only the consequences that support your side is a dangerous game.
Legalizing prostitution will improve the safety of sex workers is
an argument I have heard many times. Fine, as far as it goes. But it
needs more development. How many current sex workers will join
the regulated market for sex? If only some, then we must qualify this
to some sex workers. What about the rest? What will the effects
be on those who stay outside the regulated market and continue to
work illegally (because they are on drugs or want to charge more
for unsafe sexual practices). And, given a choice, will violent men
choose to seek out regulated sex workers and run the higher risk of
getting caught? No.
Because the argument is not adequately developed, the basic
pointthat prostitution should be legalizedis in danger of being
horribly weakened by observations from the other side that demonstrate that it is too simplistic. In the adjudicators mind, we have
reached: Legalizing prostitution will improve the safety of some
sex workers, while others, who are on drugs or willing to engage in
unsafe sexual practices, continue to work illegally and will continue
to be attacked. This is not such a great argument.
So, make a tactical concession:
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Not all sex workers will choose or be able to work in the regulated
market. Some women will continue to be exploited. But we will
be able to focus scarce police resources to work on this smaller
problem. The vast majority will be safer. And, because they will
be safer, there will be a continuing incentive to enter the regulated
market.
This shows that you have understood that your plan has some
problems but that you also have the ability to put them into context.
Some people will continue to suffer, but there is a carrot and stick
to help change that situation so they can join the many who will
benefit.
This example highlights another common weakness in handling
consequences: the crude division of people into groups. In the prostitution debate, the general statement women will benefit turns
out to be some women will benefit, at which point the queries
who, how many, in what ways, and why all become relevant
and a new level of depth is unveiled.
Lets consider another debate: This House Would Ban the
Wearing of Religious Symbols in State Schools. Government often
argues that children will no longer be isolated or segregated by their
religion. In fact, it is more complicated than that. Those children
who remain in state schools after the ban might arguably be less
segregated, but those who attend a single-faith private school or are
taught at home as a result of the decision will be more segregated.
The trick is to identify all of the many possible types of response
that different people will have to the passing of a certain law. There
are always both intended and unintended consequences. Try to
identify all of the different stakeholders and think through all of
the ways in which they might react to the policy being considered.
Not only should your treatment of consequences be subtle and
deeply considered, it should link to your arguments on principles
and practicalities.
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You could spend most of a speech persuading me that children will no longer be isolated or segregated by their religion as a
consequence of your plan. But if you earlier told me parents right
to choose the kind of education their children experience is paramount, then I will be confused about why you think it is bad for
children to be segregated by their religion. And, if you said, in your
definition, teachers will give children a warning, but we will not
physically remove the item, then I will question whether that is
sufficient enforcement to stop children from flouting the law.
Consequences, practicalities, and principles all must be united
in the furtherance of a case.
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Clash
Debates cannot be won by a brilliant case alone. A debate is a contest
where you need to characterize other teams and deal with other
arguments, showing where your ideas clash with the rest.
Clash refers to the points of disagreement in a debate, where the
two sides come into conflict. Given that the objective of a debate is
for those listening to accept or reject a motion, there is no avoiding
disagreement in a debate. In fact, where debaters try to shy away
from saying anything controversial or define away areas of disagreements, they are punished. Good debaters welcome clash as the
opportunity to test and prove their case against all opposing views.
At the macro level, clash is about commenting on how your case
fits in with other cases. Remember this example:
Member for the Government: Madam Speaker, listening to
Opening Opposition, you would think that the Government
planned to attack Barbaria out of hatred or bloodlust; in Closing Government, we will show that the consequences of military
intervention will be to prevent humanitarian disaster and create
a better life for the people there. First, let me look at the three
points outstanding from Opposition . . .
Note how it dovetails the case of Closing Government with
the case put by Opening Opposition. If this characterization of
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Lets look again at the very simple case we built up for invading
Barbaria and think about how we, as Opposition, could respond
to it:
Government: Any country that threatens its neighbors with
nuclear weapons should be stopped. If it can be stopped peacefully, with sanctions, then that should be the course. In the case
of Barbaria, sanctions have been tried and sanctions have failed.
We are left with only one available course: Military intervention
by a coalition including the U.S., UK, and others, to overthrow
the president of Barbaria and implement real democracy.
Some say Barbaria is a democracy. If it is, it is a democracy
where a powerful majority brutally suppresses weak minorities. Elections are fraudulent and violent. The media are statecontrolled and slavishly partisan. Popular demonstrations of
opposition are met with army violence. We, in Government,
argue that Barbaria is not a real democracy. But even if it were,
the threat made by its president to attack and wipe out its neighbors, allied with its recent acquisition of nuclear weapons, means
that we must take immediate action to overthrow his regime.
It is widely accepted that Barbaria has acquired a nuclear
capability. But because the country lacks the missile technology
to launch a warhead, Barbaria is not yet in a position to use its
weapons against an invader. Independent analysts like IARA
claim that the development of nuclear weapons is due to fears
about the relative weakness of their armed forces. And the very
weakness of its armed forces that led to nuclear development will
make it easier for our mission to succeed.
The minority peoples of Barbaria will be freed from an
oppressive regime and able to embrace real democracy, just as
the people of Iraq and Afghanistan now elect their governments.
In many ways a successful democratic transition is more likely.
There is a recent tradition of democracy, a strong trade union
movement, underground opposition parties, and a civil society
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then that should be the course. In the case of Barbaria, sanctions have been tried and sanctions have failed. We are left with
only one available course: Military intervention by a coalition
including the U.S., UK, and others, to overthrow the president
of Barbaria and implement real democracy.
there is plenty of scope for disagreement
Position 5aWe agree that any country that threatens its
neighbors with nuclear weapons should be stopped and that Barbaria is threatening its neighbors with nuclear weapons, BUT we
believe sanctions on Barbaria are working/will work.
Position 5bWe agree that any country that threatens its
neighbors with nuclear weapons should be stopped and that Barbaria is threatening its neighbors with nuclear weapons AND
that sanctions have failed, BUT we believe a U.S./UK-led mission would be doomed to failure and only a UN-mandated force
should be sent.
Considering the potential that exists to combine these positions,
you have extraordinary scope for creating a whole range of very different debates out of just the few lines uttered by the first speaker.
The decision to adopt a position will inform what and how you
rebut. Lets look at how you would shape your rebuttal if you took
Position 5b. Look again at the paragraph, claiming Barbaria is not
a real democracy.
Some say Barbaria is a democracy. If it is, it is a democracy where
a powerful majority brutally suppresses weak minorities. Elections are fraudulent and violent. The media are state-controlled
and slavishly partisan. Popular demonstrations of opposition
are met with army violence. We, in Government, argue that Barbaria is not a real democracy. But even if it were, the threat made
by its president to attack and wipe out its neighbors, allied with
its recent acquisition of nuclear weapons, means that we must
take immediate action to overthrow his regime.
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Rebuttal
Finally, it is time to rebut. I hope it proves worth the wait! In rebutting, you need to identify clearly your opponents point, take it at its
strongest, and argue your objection. Looking at the third paragraph
of Governments argument about invading Barbaria, compare the
following three rebuttal statements:
Government: It is widely accepted that Barbaria has acquired
a nuclear capability. But because the country lacks the missile
technology to launch a warhead, Barbaria is not yet in a position
to use its weapons against an invader. Independent analysts like
IARA claim that the development of nuclear weapons is due to
fears about the relative weakness of its armed forces. And the very
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Even if . . .
A debater needs to be flexible enough to operate in more than one
world. Her own worldviewthe one expressed in her casewill
take her some of the way. The rest is achieved by entering the worldview of other teams and showing their inadequacies.
This skill normally takes form in a sentence starting even if.
Even if allows you to engage with more of your opponents case
without having to make concessions.
Consider this passage of rebuttal again:
The Prime Minister said Barbaria lacks missile technology.
Thats an enormous gamble with the lives of our troops given 1)
how secretive the regime is, 2) the fact that this is an enormous
military secret they are unlikely to reveal to us, and 3) our woeful track record predicting other countries WMD capabilities.
And then add this to it:
But even if he is right about missiles, nuclear material, which
we know they possess, could easily be added to dirty bombs and
other devices used against our troops. And even if they decide
against using the material, they may sell it to terrorist groups to
raise money and ensure that it doesnt fall into our hands.
The speaker doesnt say, There are missiles and leave it at that.
She says, Even if there werent missiles, you would still be in the
wrong. This is a stronger position.
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The member who is speaking may ask the person offering the
Point of Information to sit down once he has had a reasonable
opportunity to be heard and understood.
Members should attempt to answer at least two Points of Information during their speech. Members should also offer Points
of Information.
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say to our point that a prolonged guerrilla war is the most likely
outcome?
POIs can be effective in different ways. They can highlight weaknesses in an opponents case by demonstrating that your opponent
hasnt thought through the full implications of their position. They
can force a speaker to deal with an issue she hadnt considered. They
can highlight the centrality of your points to the debate, reminding
adjudicators of your continued participation.
The best points are succinct and clear. They are usually questions
but dont have to be formulated as a question as long as they challenge the person speaking. Ideally, they are related to the argument
being made by the person speaking, adding spontaneity to the
debate.
Adjudicators will note Points of Information and should reward
you for asking challenging, interesting points as part of their overall
assessment of the debate.
You have more to lose than to gain from answering Points of
Information. The best case has you responding to an unexpected
point by offering a sparkling, witty reply, then returning seamlessly
to your argument. If you do, it will raise the level of an excellent
speech. The worst case finds you standing, mouth open, wondering
what was meant, muttering something about answering it later, leaving it to your partner, or pretending you havent heard it.
You can avoid trouble with Points of Information by remembering only to accept them at a moment that suits you. One minute and
10 seconds into your speech is too early to provide a context within
which to answer. Five minutes and 45 seconds into your speech
leaves you too little time to respond and round off your speech. The
best time to accept a point is when you have just completed one of
your arguments, enabling you to respond directly and move on with
your speech.
It is very important to answer points directly. Failure to engage
is something that adjudicators look for. It only takes a moment but
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can make all the difference in a close debate. One way that some
speakers try to get around answering Points of Information is by
not accepting any points. Adjudicators are given clear instructions
to punish speakers who fail to take two points in their speech. Be
warned!
Manner
The rules state: Manner is the presentation of the speech. It is the
style and structure a member uses to further his or her case and
persuade the audience. On paper, style and structure account for
half of the overall impression upon which adjudicators base their
marks. It is, therefore, very important to find out what is considered
good style and good structure in Worlds Style debate. In practice,
however, my experience on thousands of adjudication panels tells
me that style and structure account for a good deal less than half
the overall mark.
Style
Under style, the rules list as relevant eye contact, voice modulation, hand gestures, language, the use of notes and any other element which may affect the effectiveness of the presentation of the
member. WS lauds eye contact. Changing the tone and volume of
your voice and using pauses for emphasis are encouraged. Language
should be kept clear and simpledebaters should steer clear of language that is verbose or confusing. Looking down at notes, beyond
the occasional glance, detracts from manner.
Style should be appropriate to the subject matter. If you have a
sunny, upbeat disposition, use it to inject some much-needed life
into a debate about voting reform, for example. In your next debate,
about the use of torture as a weapon in the war on terror, it would be
advisable to change your tone. Because a debate is artificialyou
dont choose which side to speak on based on your genuine beliefs
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it can be easy to forget that you are talking about issues that really
matter to some of the audience. An average reasonable person will
want to see a connection between your emotional register and the
subject under discussion.
Debate is a live event, and audiences enjoy a speaker who can
command attention and interest with wit. Jokes work best when
they flow naturally from the subject matter and are integrated into
a speech. Although debating has attracted some brilliantly funny
people, it is not the forum for stand-up comedy, gag after gag.
Remember, debaters are asked to talk about some very serious topics, matters of life and death, emotive issues like abortion and eating
disorders that will have personal resonance with many people in the
room. All style should be appropriate to the subject matterhumor
is no exception.
Whenever I ask for a list of great public speakers and communicators, the names Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Tony Blair, Martin
Luther King, Jr., and Ronald Reagan appear somewhere high on the
list. What helps these men stand out from the political crowd is their
ability to connect with people. Above and beyond the intellectual
force of their arguments is an emotional power that appeals. And,
let us never forget the role of the adjudicatorto judge from the
viewpoint of the average reasonable person.
The average reasonable person is not a debate-consuming robot,
motivated only by logic and the buzzwords of social science. He or
she is passionate, emotional, moved by feeling and insight. Adjudicators enjoy being moved by speakers who take the trouble to look
at them, speak to them intelligibly, use clear language, and communicate fluently without a script.
In reality, some of the most successful debaters of recent years
have not lived up to this theory. Speeches are delivered at increasingly high speeds. The language is abstract, specialized, and devoid
of power. The average reasonable person would often not have a clue
what was going on as debaters natter on about positive externalities and self-actualization. Adjudicators have caved by taking the
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Structure
The first time I attended the Cambridge IV, after a succession of
defeats, I summoned up the courage to ask the advice of a much older
student who had twice beaten us that day. He gave me one word
structureand then walked off. I thought him very rude, but nevertheless followed his advice and it started to pay dividends. It was both
the shortest and most useful conversation about debating I ever had.
Every speech should be structured. Every team should organize
its matter across both speeches in the way that maximizes its persuasiveness. You need to be consistent within a speech and across
a team. Each speaker must have something new to say (unless you
are Closing Government/Opposition). Speeches should have an
introduction and conclusion as well as arguments. You need to make
sure you make a seven-minute speech. You need to spend time on
the most important aspects of what you have to say.
Begin your speech by telling your audience where you are going
to take them. The subtlest way to achieve this is to start your speech
with an outline of your case that contains the names of your arguments, so that when adjudicators hear them again, they understand
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where they fit into your case. If you have less faith in the listening
skills of your panel, you can choose to signpostsaying, My points
will be a, b, c, and d, before my partner goes on to say e and f.
The simplest way to structure the body of the speech is to divide
it into rebuttal and arguments. Equally, you can deal with themes,
combining rebuttal and arguments as you go along. If adjudicators
understand the outline of your case and the names of the arguments
you intend to make, it will make a lot more sense than if you pop
them out of nowhere.
One way to highlight your command of structure is to refer to
your partners arguments. In response to a Point of Information, for
example, you can give a direct answer, then show how your partner
already covered the point. Or, a first speaker can list the intended
points of her partner. This gives listeners the impression of clear
thinking and control.
Had I been writing this book 10 years ago, I would have suggested that three points is the norm for a seven-minute speech and
mentioned the possibility of making two arguments if you have a
lot of rebuttal to cover. Certainly some debaters exceeded these
guidelines, but their style was thought to be inferior and it limited
their success.
Now, very few debaters honor these constraints. By increasing
the speed of delivery, they have opened up new possibilities. Four,
five, six, or more points in a speech are not uncommon.
With so many ideas to be covered, the importance of structure
has never been greater. Linking them together into a story that
makes sense and integrating it with your partners ideas take great
ingenuity.
The risk is that you aim for a high target number, trying to use all
the possible material, and end up with a few rogue points at the end,
forced in with a shoehorn. You are under pressure not to leave arguments for the closing team. But remember that their ideas need not
only to be new but also to be important. If you have focused on the
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heart of the debate for the majority of your time, they can abstract as
much as they like or add as many examples as their creativity allows.
You will have done well.
Instead, work from your case. If an argument needs to be made
to support your story, make it. If it sits outside your case, then focus
on deeper analysis of the points you have already offered. I have
never heard an adjudicator criticize a team for going into points in
too much depth. I would encourage you, despite all the pressures,
to aim for quality, not quantity.
One of the most common faults of debaters is underestimating
how quickly time passes while they are talking. Worried, perhaps,
about running out of things to say, speakers will delay making their
final point until the six-minute bang has sounded. This leaves only
60 seconds to make the argument and conclude the speech. Even if
adjudicators are able to grasp the point in that time, they are left to
form the conclusion, perhaps wrongly, that the speaker didnt think
it particularly important.
With practice, you can gain an instinctive sense of the length of
a seven-minute speech, but you may still want some help in keeping
track of time. You can place a stopwatch on the lectern or table in
front of you during the debate. Alternatively, your teammate can
time your speech and give you hand signals to show you when each
minute is up. Any of these methods can help you apportion sufficient time to all of the areas you want to cover.
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collateral damage, independent bodyall these terms carry connotations for good or ill.
If your title is catchy, chances are that people will start using it.
Soif you are going to set up an expensive, powerful, unelected
commission of bureaucrats, call it an independent body. If you
are going to take action against armed militants, call them terrorists rather than rebels. If you want the government to support
companies through the recession, call it pro-business politics not
corporate handouts.
If people start using your term, they will begin to think differently about the debate. Ideas will be packaged in ways favorable to
your side. Equally, if the other side is framing the debate in a way
you dont like, challenge the language. Relabel their points, giving
them the meaning you want them to bear:
Three times you described our policy as nanny state. Noour
policy is right because we believe in a welfare state, where people
in need are looked after, not left to struggle alone.
This is much better than ending up in a position where you are
saying, Yes, it is a nanny state but whats wrong with that? The designation is too loaded to accept. It carries emotion that will damage
your case, even though it is simply a label.
Framing and language can also go badly wrong. If you label
Africa as a country and go on and on about it being tribal, adjudicators will be wincing as they listen to you. If you casually refer to
homosexual men as deviants and equate gay sex with pedophilia,
it will color everything else you say. In short, be aware that language
reveals your worldview, just as arguments do. Keep control of your
terminology.
Finally, try to avoid using debating buzzwords. If your speech
sounds like this:
Mr. Speaker, we on Closing Opposition will rebut the status quo
case brought by Opening Government and the knife brought by
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How to Adjudicate
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Adjudicators
If you attend tournaments, you will find all sorts of people end up as
adjudicators: former debaters who have left the university but come
back to help out and see old friends; current debaters who were
not selected for their teams but want to come and be part of the
tournament. You will meet some adjudicators who rarely or never
debated themselves but have come to tournaments and devoted
their energies to learning how to judge. You will also encounter
students from the host institution, many of whom will often be
inexperienced. Occasionally, you will be judged by the coaches of
other teams.
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Setup
The setup of an adjudication panel follows some basic rules and conventions. A typical preliminary round has three adjudicators. Octo-,
quarter- and semifinals may have five adjudicators. A final will often
have seven or even nine adjudicators.
One of the adjudicators will be appointed Chair. The Chair is
the person referred to by debaters as Mr. or Madam Speaker. Her
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or his job is to keep order, ensure that the speeches are timed, manage the panel, and fill out the paperwork that records the result. The
Chair has the tiebreaking voteif the panel is equally split, he or
she decides the winner.
Other adjudicators (often called wings, in reference to the convention that the Chair sits in the middle) help form the consensus
on which the decision is made. If it comes to a vote, two wings can
outvote the Chair. One of the wings will act as timekeeper in addition to his judging responsibilities.
Before the start of the round, the Chair will hand out the ballot
paper to the teams so teams can check that they are in the right room
and the right position on the table. Each team will also indicate at
this stage the order in which they intend to speak (although they
can change their mind during the debate).
Having got back the ballot and ensured that one of the judges has
assumed responsibility for time keeping, the Chair will introduce
the debate, saying something like:
I call this House to order. Welcome to Round 1 of the Barbaria
National Debating Championships 2011. The teams are Namon
A in Opening Government, Abalob B in Opening Opposition,
Bingchang A in Closing Government, and Habanila C in Closing Opposition. Speeches are seven minutes in length. After one
minute, you will hear this sound (bang), which means Points of
Information can be offered by the other side. After six minutes,
you will the sound again (bang), which means Points can no
longer be offered. After seven minutes, you will hear this sound
(bang, bang) after which you should draw your speech to a close.
The motion before the House is that This House Would Allow
the Sale of Human Organs. I now invite the Prime Minister to
open the case for the Government.
At the end of the speech, the Chair will speak again, saying
something like:
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I thank the speaker for his/her speech and call upon the Leader
of the Opposition to open the case for his/her side.
Each speaker should be called by the Chair and thanked for her
or his contribution after his or her speech.
The only other interventions the Chair will make in the debate
are if someone tries to offer a Point of Information in a speakers
protected time or if a Point is offered legitimately but goes beyond
15 seconds. In these instances, the Chair can say order or out of
time and signal to the offending party that he should sit down. A
good Chair should let the debate flow and say as little as possible.
Mindset
How can an adjudicatorwith his individual identity, prejudices,
preferences, and opinionsjudge what is persuasive without being
persuaded? Lets look at the peculiar mindset of the adjudicator and
start by looking for guidance from the rules. Adjudicators should:
The most important part to get your head around is the average
reasonable person. The average reasonable person is assumed not
to have specialist knowledge on the issue of any debate. You may
have a PhD in political science, but if a debater gets up and bases his
speech on the veil of ignorance without explaining what it means
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or where it comes from, you should not fill in the gaps for him. You
might have personal experience of serving in the armed forces, but if
a debate gets onto the question of military tactics, however strongly
you feel, you need to put those feelings to one side.
When adjudicators do their job well, debaters who study law,
economics, or politics are not at an advantage. They have to explain
concepts with which they are familiar in a new context, making
them accessible to those without their grounding in the subject.
Judges must suspend their opinions without losing the critical
faculties that created them. It is a difficult exercise because judges
must avoid discrimination and bias. Obviously, an arbitrary hatred
of women or men, black people, or Israelis would be a totally unacceptable basis for any decision. Discrimination can sneak in in subtle ways to infect our decision making. In an abortion debate, do
we give greater credence to the views of women? In a debate about
slavery, do we discount the views of white Europeans? Is a debater
who is openly gay treated as an expert on issues around homosexuality? Discrimination on the grounds of identity is not permissible,
whether it fits the traditional or the modern mold.
Bias often is more difficult to suppress. Average reasonable people like you and me have opinions. We feel incredibly strongly about
some things, sometimes so much so that we are prepared to give up
our time to write, lobby, march, campaign, and vote. Even on those
issues we care less about, we will have opinions created through a
mixture of upbringing, feelings, and reasoned thought. When a new
idea comes alongis computer-simulated pornography wrong?
we have an instinctive answer lurking inside us. Not only that but we
often have explicitly considered arguments that come up in debates
and have rejected them in the process of forming our own opinions.
Lets imagine I am judging a debate on something I have thought
about deeplywhether the Alternative Vote (AV) electoral system should be adopted in the UK. The subject of an unprecedented
national referendum in 2011, AV involves moving from putting a simple X in the box of your favorite candidate to ranking the candidates
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in order (1, 2, 3, etc.). This fragment is from the first minute of the
Prime Ministers speech.
Firstly, the Alternative Vote system should be adopted for British
general elections because it is more proportional. Proportional
systems are fairer because the number of seats a party receives in
Parliament more closely reflects their national share of the vote.
It cannot be right that the Liberal Democrats gained almost a
million votes at the 2010 election but lost five seats. The votes of
those million people should have counted for something.
When I heard the motion was about voting system reform, I was
pleased because I had studied political science and wrote a dissertation on voting and electoral reform. Heres what is going on in the
back of my mind, listening to this without my adjudicators hat on,
with my unkempt thoughts in brackets.
Firstly, the Alternative Vote system should be adopted for British general elections because it is more proportional [what?
You idiot! It isnt more proportional, it just takes account of
peoples preferences better. Oh no, this debate is going to be
terrible now]. Proportional systems are fairer [why?] because
the number of seats a party receives in Parliament more closely
reflects their national share of the vote [but that would not necessarily happen under AV!]. It cannot be right that the Liberal
Democrats gained almost a million votes at the 2010 election but
lost five seats [why not? And anyway that or worse could happen under AV!]. The votes of those million people should have
counted for something [oh no, theyve totally got the wrong
end of the stick. I wonder if Opposition will call them on it.
These guys are going to come in fourth].
Now, while it is sad for me that my pet topic is being massacred,
these responses are not the right way to think as a judge. Lets have
a go with my adjudicators hat on.
Firstly, the Alternative Vote system should be adopted for
British general elections [OK, thats clear] because it is more
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proportional [thats not true! But would an average reasonable person know that? Probably not. OK, lets see where this
goes]. Proportional systems are fairer because the number of
seats a party receives in Parliament more closely reflects their
national share of the vote [fair=share in Parliament. Interesting. I wonder if that will be challenged]. It cannot be right that
the Liberal Democrats gained almost a million votes at the 2010
election but lost five seats [Because fair=share in Parliament?
OK]. The votes of those million people should have counted for
something.
As an adjudicator, I am slow to draw conclusions. I spend more
time understanding points and less time assessing them myself.
When the Opposition speaks, I allow them to provide the critique.
I still know that AV is not a proportional system. But it is just
possible that this piece of information, though key in academic discussions of various voting systems, will turn out to be irrelevant
to the debate. If the Opposition accepts the contention that AV is
proportional and argue against AV because they oppose all proportional systems, we could have a good debate, albeit using a misleading label for the issues under discussion. Had I dismissed Opening
Government as hopelessly ignorant and automatically fourth, I
would be left with nowhere to go when the other teams showed
equal ignorance.
Rarely is it appropriate for a judge to make a call between teams
on their knowledge base. Yet, teams often spend a lot of time and
effort trying to impress adjudicators with the encyclopedic content of their minds. A good example of knowledge one-upmanship
I recall was a debate about teaching in foreign languages held in
Malaysia. The Opening Government decided, for reasons best
known to themselves, to place the debate in Switzerland, where they
said there was one official languageFrench. The Opening Opposition engaged in the debate but not before correcting the Opening
Government by disclosing there were two official languages
French and German. Closing Government started by sayingas an
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Overcoming Bias
The main obstacle to becoming a good adjudicator is overcoming
bias. Here are the three most common structural and human biases
of which you need to be aware. The Long Diagonal Bias and Guilt
by Association emerge from the four-team format of a Worlds Style
debate. Entering the debate is a risk in any format. You need to guard
against them all.
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are hearing now. In debating, this contributes to the Long Diagonal Bias. Accordingly, Opening Government, who speak first, may
appear to have less residual impact on a debate. Closing Opposition, who speak last, tends to linger in the memory. The design of a
Worlds Style debate leaves it open to human error. It is a potential
error that adjudicators must overcome.
Several structural reasons tend to give Opening Government
a harder job. First, they alone must produce a definitiona plan
that works. If any problems emerge with their definition over the
hour, it hits them hardest. Second, their arguments are submitted
early in the debate, which gives all of Opposition the chance to discredit them. Third, only their second speaker has the opportunity
to rebut. Fourth, their only way of interacting with the second half
of the debate is through Points of Information, and there is a risk of
adjudicators forgetting their contribution.
Closing Opposition enjoys natural advantages. First, they get
to hear all three other cases before they show their hand. Second,
their first speech is delivered 35 minutes into the debate, allowing
ample time for thought and preparation. Third, the scope for finding weaknesses and inconsistencies in a case is greater the longer
the debate goes on. Fourth, their second speaker can speak freely
with no fear of reply. Fifth, they have the final say and their characterization of the debate is fresh in adjudicators minds when they
confer.
If you ever see a semifinal or final at a major competition, you
will notice, after the teams are announced, that a member of each
team will go forward to draw the position out of a hat. The team that
gets Opening Government will normally look disappointed; the
team that picks Closing Opposition is usually delighted.
This strong bias has been confirmed by results in debating competitions. Analysis of preliminary rounds in major tournaments
shows that Opening Opposition and Closing Government each win
around 25 percent of debates, while Opening Government wins less
than 20 percent, and Closing Opposition more than 30 percent.
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Sitting down to write this section, I have decided to call this the
Long Diagonal Bias. Giving it capital letters makes it look important. Using abstract language makes it sound like a well-tested social
phenomenon. The term long diagonal is sometimes used by adjudicators to describe the interaction between Opening Government and
Closing Opposition, with short diagonal describing Opening Opposition and Closing Government, simply because they are joined with
diagonal lines on the judges page. It has all the hallmarks of a phrase
that will stick in debaters minds.
Novice debaters, all of whom speak in the preliminary rounds,
commonly prefer to speak during the second half of the debate and
will often be better in those positions. They have more time to think
of arguments and find fault with some of what the other teams have
said. Creating a case well takes skills that need more work over a
longer period.
Adjudicators must keep in mind their duty to reward Opening
Government for doing their job well. If the Prime Minister has a
clear definition, makes an excellent case with exceptional manner,
he or she deserves a high mark. If the Deputy Prime Minister deals
effectively with the Leader of the Opposition, defends and develops the case, he or she should be rewarded. If together, they have
defined the problem, proposed a policy, made principled and practical arguments, examined the likely consequences, it sounds like a
comprehensive fulfillment of all they can do. It is no good lauding
Opening Government for setting up a good debate and then giving
the other teams all the credit for building on their work.
Adjudicators must also be mindful that they do not punish
Opening Government for mistakes more harshly than they would
other teams. That definition was just crazy, I gave them an automatic fourth is not an acceptable adjudication. When Opening
Opposition launches into their argumentation without explaining where they stand on the big picture, I never hear judges say,
Their case was non-existent, I gave them an automatic fourth.
Other teams must earn their right to be placed ahead of Opening
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Guilt by Association
Any team can win any debate.
A team can only perform its role. If it does the best job, it
deserves to win. The Guilt by Association trap is activated when an
adjudicator is so unconvinced by one half of the Government (or
Opposition) that she fails to apply her critical faculties to the other
half. The key to avoiding it is a simple question, asked frequently:
What does this team have to do to win?
A sentence I hear too often on adjudication panels is, They
did as well as they could, but they just couldnt win from that position. The typical scenario is as follows. Opening Government does
a terrible job, laying out an unworkable plan, and bringing weak
arguments. Opening Opposition destroys the plan, shows up its
implausibility, and exposes each of the Governments arguments
with glee. At this point, an inexperienced judge reaches the conclusion that Closing Government cannot win the debate, whatever
they do, and mentally pencils them in for third place. This is Guilt
by Association, and it is poor adjudication.
The time-tested remedy is to return to the simple question:
Who was most persuasive? I do not believe this means Who did
I agree with at the end of debate? I can appreciate a brilliant case for
consensual incest or neoconservatism without agreeing with it. My
personal opinion is not on the line, because it has been suspended
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for the duration of the debate. No, who was most persuasive means
How far would you have moved an average reasonable person
toward being convinced?
If Opening Government were truly dreadful, and Opening
Opposition were devastatingly good, then our reasonable person
is going to be totally convinced by Opposition at the halfway stage.
But, if somehow Closing Government can resurrect some ideas,
make hearers think again, come up with nagging doubtseven if
our reasonable person ends up siding with Oppositionthey will
have achieved a great deal given the point at which they started.
And, it is possible for them to win the debate.
Adjudicators need to think about debates as comprising four
teams, not two. A good Closing Government team will step away
from the specific proposal, while taking care never, overtly, to reject
it and focus on the principle behind the case in greater depth. They
will spend a lot of time attacking the Opposition, demonstrating
that weaknesses on both sides muddy the water. If they genuinely
do as well as they could from that position, then they deserve a
score in the ninetiesan exceptional mark, not to be offered lightly
It is not only possible, but common, that opening and closing
teams on the same side take first and fourth place. This can seem
odd at first to people accustomed to other styles of debate, where a
motion either passes or falls. It is one of the great strengths of WS
debate. If you struggle with the idea, try asking yourself, What does
this team have to do to win? If you cant answer the question, keep
asking it until you can.
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Deliberation
Lets move from the adjudicators mindset during the debate to
what happens immediately afterward. This process of discussion
and decision making is known as deliberation. Deliberation transforms the separate views of the adjudication panel into a single,
binding result.
When a debate ends, the Chair will thank all of the speakers and
invite them to cross the floorthey are then welcome to stand
up, leave their seats, and shake hands with their opponents before
exiting the room.
Once the debaters have left, the process of deliberation begins.
The Chair will normally start by asking other judges if they would
like to take a short time, perhaps a minute, to look at their notes.
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Personally, I find this period of silence unhelpfulI consider debating to be a live event that should provoke, at its climax, an instant
decision. But I am always happy to allow people extra time to mull
over what they have heard. If adjudicators are using the time to
reconsider the beginning of the debate, then it is doubtless an excellent use of time and may help to overcome the Long Diagonal Bias.
Silent reflection and review over, the Chair should ask the other
judges for their 1, 2, 3, 4. If any judge is not certain, then the Chair
should try to get some sort of commitmentOpening Government definitely didnt win or Its between the Opposition teams
but Im not sure after that. Often, judges want to get into detailed
discussion of the debate or start justifying their placement at this
stage. It is important that the Chairpolitely but firmlystop that
discussion dead in its tracks.
I also think it important that the Chair refrain from expressing
his or her opinion before hearing from the other adjudicators. In
competitions, wing judges often fear getting a bad report from a
more experienced Chair. A Chairs forceful statement in support
of Opening Opposition can leave a wing judge feeling pressured to
follow suit. It is more respectful, and more likely to create genuine
compromise, if the Chair listens before expressing his or her view.
Having spoken to each of the judges, the Chair will have a
sense of where the discussion needs to focus. I note down peoples
rankingsin no particular orderon a sheet of paper, especially
when there are five, seven, or nine on a panel. Lets say we have a
five-person panel.
Judge
OG
Julia
Ahmed
3 or 4
OO
CG
CO
3 or 4
1 or 2
Jose
Belinda
3 or 4
3 or 4
Me
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OG
OO
CG
CO
1 or 2
1 or 2
Ahmed
Jose
Belinda
3 or 4
3 or 4
Me
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OG
OO
CG
CO
Ahmed
Jose
Belinda
Me
At this point, I will suggest that we are heading toward the order:
1
OO
CO
CG
OG
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Also, while the Chair is active in the sense of directing discussion, note that his or her opinions do not dominate the panel. The
wise Chair avoids revealing any opinions until the last moment,
encouraging other judges to come forward with opinions, and holds
off declaring a view and then challenging other judges to disagree.
Respect is shown for all opinions and the Chair prefers gentle guidance to loud advocacy for one or the other of the teams.
Despite all this, if a vote is needed to determine a final ranking, the Chair should go through in the following order: Which
team came first? Who came second? Who came third? Who came
fourth? Even if the most extreme position emerges and, on a fiveperson panel, the winning team has only two votes, with every other
team getting one vote, that is enough to declare that team the winner. That team then drops out of consideration for second, third, or
fourth.
Having reached a decision, the Chair will fill out the ballot
paper, writing 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and/or 3, 2, 1, 0 in the relevant boxes.
But the job is not yet done. At this point, the panel needs to reach
agreement on speaker pointsthe points the individual debaters
are awarded for their performance.
In any debate, adjudicators are instructed to ensure that the
aggregate of a teams speaker points reflects the position of the
team in the debate. So, if a team comes in first, it must have the
highest aggregate speaker points. The second-place team must
have lower aggregate speaker points than the winning team and a
higher aggregate than the third-place team. The fourth-place team
must have the lowest aggregate speaker points. This is sometimes
expressed in the instruction no low-point wins!
Speaker points are less important than team points. On the
overall tournament standings, teams are ranked in order of their
team points. When teams have the same number of team points,
aggregate speaker points are used as a tiebreaker.
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Team Points
Speaker Points
Team Position
Camford
321
Newston
322
Dhalli
315
Mandor
312
Abinara
308
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8985: Very good, central arguments engage well with the most
important issues on the table and are highly compelling; sophisticated responses would be required to refute them. Delivery is
clear and very persuasive. Role fulfillment and structure probably flawless.
8480: Relevant and pertinent arguments address key issues
in the round with sufficient explanation. The speech is clear in
almost its entirety and holds ones attention persuasively. Role is
well-fulfilled and structure is unlikely to be problematic.
7975: Arguments are almost exclusively relevant, and frequently persuasive. Occasionally, but not often, the speaker may
slip into: i) deficits in explanation, ii) simplistic argumentation
vulnerable to competent responses, or iii) peripheral or irrelevant arguments. The speaker holds ones attention, provides
clear structure, and successfully fulfills his basic role on the
table.
7470: Arguments are generally relevant, and some explanation
of them given, but there may be obvious gaps in logic, multiple
points of peripheral or irrelevant material, and simplistic argumentation. The speaker mostly holds the audiences attention
and is usually clear, but rarely compelling, and may sometimes
be difficult to follow. There is a decent but incomplete attempt to
fulfill ones role on the table, and structure may be imperfectly
delivered.
6965: Relevant arguments are frequently made, but with
very rudimentary explanation. The speaker is clear enough to
be understood the vast majority of the time, but this may be
difficult and/or unrewarding. Structure poor; poor attempt to
fulfill role.
6460: The speaker is often relevant, but rarely makes full arguments. Frequently unclear and confusing; really problematic
structure/lack thereof; some awareness of role.
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5955: The speech rarely makes relevant claims, only occasionally formulated as arguments. Hard to follow, little/no structure;
no evident awareness of role.
5450: Content is almost never relevant, and is both confusing and confused. No structure or fulfillment of role is, in any
meaningful sense, provided.
This is very detailed guidance. For a simpler rule of thumb:
90+a Worlds finalist speaking at his or her best
8089a speech you would expect to see in the Worlds
octo-finals
7079average for Worlds
6069poor
5059reserved for extremely flawed speeches
I concede this is only helpful if you have experience of Worlds! A
72 in one tournament should get a 72 in any other tournament. The
more debates you attend, the bigger the bank of speeches you build
up, the easier it is to draw comparisons and identify the right score.
The Chair will usually be more directive in setting speaker
marks, as he or she tends to be the most experienced adjudicator.
The best way to avoid mistakes is to start with the winning team.
In our debate, Opening Opposition won, deserved scores around
8085, and the judges felt the first speaker was better, so the Chair
will ask 85?, 84?, 83? for each speaker until a quick consensus
of nods emerges. Closing Opposition came second and it was a very
close decision, so you would expect the speaker scores to reflect
thatin fact, two judges thought they were better than Opening
Opposition when the discussion began. In fact, given the closeness
of the discussion, the Chair will insist that the gap between all the
teams should not be too wide.
Adjudicators should be encouraged to use the whole scale,
between 50 and 100, if the speeches merit it. At times, judges like
to play it safe, giving everybody a score between 70 and 80. This is
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Verbal Adjudication
The Chairs final duty is to tell the teams the result, explain the decision, and offer advice on how the teams can improve.
The best explanations and advice are constructive and specific.
When you talk about each team, start by praising them for what
they did well. Try to articulate their case at its strongest to show
you understood what they wanted to achieve. Only then go on to
show whyin light of the efforts of other teamsthey ended in a
particular position. Consider:
Closing Opposition. I felt there was a slight lack of structure and
not quite enough engagement with some of the points coming out
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quarterfinals, semifinals or a final, in recognition of the unique challenge faced by nonnative speakers. Until that point, though, there
should be absolutely no difference in treatment.
While it is not unusual for ESL speakers to best native English
speakers in debates, rarely do ESL speakers win tournaments or
top speaker tabs at competitions where both are present. With even
intermediate spoken English, creating a case and forming arguments are possible. With good aural English, debaters should be
able to follow a speech and understand the salient points, allowing
them to rebut. The type of language encouraged in rules is clear and
simple not verbose or confusing, so speakers are encouraged to
steer away from the verbal flights that are possible to an articulate
native speaker.
I have come across a handful of speakers whose English was
unintelligible to me. Try as I might, I could not understand what
they wanted to say, except for an odd word or two. In these very
rare instances, I have been forced to give a low mark. If you cannot understand what is being said, you cannot reward it. You cannot imagine what you heard and judge accordingly, just as a native
speaker who whispered inaudibly would be strongly penalized. I
repeatthis is an extremely rare occurrence. Yet the perception
among ESL speakers can be that they are being punished for poor
style in top-level debates. In my opinion, this is only partly true.
So, what part is true? Some of the time, ESL speakers are being
penalized for speaking too slowly. It is never expressed in this way,
but because a little extra time (even a small amount) is required
to get an idea across when you are searching for the right words, it
can mean you make one fewer argument, engage in one fewer piece
of rebuttal, cut short one even if . . . argument. When everyone is
doing the basics well, these marginal differences count.
By rewarding speakers too highly for the number of arguments,
adjudicators can unwittingly put ESL speakers at a disadvantage.
Wise to this, some ESL speakers have started trying to keep up with
the ferocious pace of their counterparts who have English as their
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mother tongue. Few can manage it. For the rest, what they gain in
number of arguments, they lose in quality of exposition
I believe the single biggest innovation WS could make to help
ESL speakers compete equally is a counterintuitive one: Reverse the
stealthy downgrading of style as a criterion in adjudication. Talking quickly, with no pauses, no emphasis, no connection, should be
penalized by adjudicators. The rules are cleargood style never
meant blinding people with obscure words or showing off your
vocabulary. When speakers are judged on the clarity and persuasiveness of their styleas well as on the substance of their arguments
the playing field will be leveled for all debaters.
Adjudicators who speak English as a second language should
judge in exactly the same way as native speakers of English. The
task is to assess the debate on the basis of which team were most
persuasive to youfocus on arguments rather than presentation.
I have sat alongside ESL adjudicators who are total novices and
ESL adjudicators who are among the finest judges of debate in the
world. Even the term ESL adjudicator makes me uncomfortable
please understand that no distinction is made between adjudicators on the basis of language. In using the term, I am talking about
adjudicators who just happen to speak English as a second language.
Knowing that ESL adjudicators judge major finals should be a great
incentive for you to become involved in judging with confidence.
If you are asked to judge a debate and feel you havent kept up,
it is natural to feel under pressure or even a little embarrassed. You
shouldnt be. The speakers must take their panel as they find them
and are responsible for making themselves understood. If an adjudicator cant follow a debaters language, the debater is at fault. If the
speed at which a debater speaks makes following the reasoning hard
for an ESL adjudicator, again, the debater is at fault.
In an ideal world, all adjudicators would understand everything
that all debaters said. But even the most aurally gifted native speaker
has a limit to what he can take in. Average reasonable people do
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not always listen to, let alone follow, boring speeches. By trying to
understand a speaker, you are doing all that can be asked of you.
Please dont reward a point because you think it sounded good. If
you cant explain why its a good point, the speakers have failed to
persuade you.
This section should reassure. ESL speakers and adjudicators
should be treated exactly the same as native speakers and adjudicators. Major tournaments offer special ESL finals, but if we were to
restore style to its rightful place, many more ESL speakers would
win tournaments outright.
Analysis Debates
An analysis debate is a debate that discusses the truth of a proposition, rather than the desirability of a course of action.
In the last few years, Chief Adjudicators at some major tournaments have set one motion that asks debaters to do something different from the norm. Rather than coming up with a definition that
proposes taking action, in these debates, Opening Government is
expected to argue that the motion is true. The other teams are also
supposed to address this question of truth.
When a Chief Adjudicator sets an analysis debate, he or she
announces the fact to debaters.
Here are some examples of analysis debate motions:
This House Believes Iraq Is Better Off Now Than Before the War
This House Believes Feminism Has Damaged Motherhood
This House Believes Israel Is Not a Democracy
This House Believes the Welfare State Has Hurt the Poor
Lets take the last motion. The traditional way of addressing that
topic would be to propose welfare reform of some kind, justifying it
primarily by its beneficial effects on the poorest people. An analysis
debate asks Opening Government to make the case that the welfare
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state has hurt the poor and leave it at that. Both Opposition teams
and Closing Government have the same task: analyze more, analyze
better.
Analysis debates are notoriously difficult for adjudicators. They
require an extraordinary amount of knowledge on the part of the
judges. Consider the Iraq debate. Debaters are forced to make such
detailed claims about the current state of affairs in Iraq that the
average reasonable person would not be expected to have gleaned
from readily available sources. How is the adjudicator supposed
to say who is right and wrong on these questions of fact? In traditional debates, these claims and counter-claims are just one weapon
alongside normative arguments (which require no knowledge)
and predictions of the future (which are not wholly dependent on
knowledge). Here they are the whole debate.
The best basis for adjudication when you dont have the knowledge to decide is to focus on those facts that are agreed upon by both
sides. If Government and Opposition both accept that feminists
have created an expectation that women should workwhether you
agree with that historically or notthen the two sides have moved
to fruitful ground for assessing whether more women working longer hours has been good for the institution of motherhood. Without
such shared facts, adjudicators can find themselves really struggling.
With these facts, you can bring your analytical skills to bear.
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Entering Competitions
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Entering Competitions
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Best to Worst
If you put the best two speakers in your club on the same team, they
should have the greatest chance of success. By competing in tougher
rooms, against better opposition, they will gain valuable experience
and understand what is needed to raise their performance to the
next level. If that knowledge and expertise are fed back into the
clubinformally and at training sessionsthen such pairings
can benefit everybody. Just one team reaching a semifinal or final
can act as a motivator to others within the club and encourage new
members to get involved in debating. It can also signal to university
authorities that the good name of their institution can be enhanced
by supporting debate.
A good team doing well can raise the overall standard if an effective training program is in place where they share their insights.
The best speakers must be willing to share what they do well. If this
doesnt happen, less successful speakers are worse off under this
approachthey are less likely, through strong results, to gain the
opportunity to speak in a room that lifts their horizons. Under such
circumstances, they may lose motivation and feel that they will never
be good enough. Another negative, if resources are scarce, is that
while the best two speakers get frequent opportunities, people with
less experience may have difficulty getting to tournaments at all.
I recommend a best-to-worst selection policy for new clubs
trying to build knowledge and make a name for themselves at
tournaments. But it must be carefully managed to avoid division.
Experiences in top rooms, against the best teams, are precious and
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Pro-Am
A term borrowed from the world of golf, Pro-Am stands for
ProfessionalAmateur and refers to competitions that pair a top
golfer with someone of lesser skill. Thankfully, there are no paid
debaters, so experience, rather than money, is the dividing line.
A Pro-Am selection policy has team formation pairing your most
experienced debaters with the least experienced debaters.
The advantage of this pairing policy is that it gives newer speakers the chance to learn from their more experienced partner. How
does she get ready for the debate? What questions does he ask in
preparation time? How does she avoid weaknesses in her case?
Even before a word is uttered in the debate, so much can be learned
through preparing together.
The downsides are that the stronger speaker mayconsciously
or unconsciouslychange her approach to compensate for her
partner. She may choose always to speak first, to ensure a strong
foundation is in place; she may try to squeeze more points into her
speech, ensuring they get across. Any number of these bad habits
may develop. The weaker speaker may feel bad about letting his partner downor be very uncomfortable about being the worst speaker
in every room if the gap between the two of them is wide.
In short, the characters of those involved determine whether a
Pro-Am team will work. Aware of the downsides, in Scotland, an
annual tournament is held where all the teams are so composed,
thus the incentives for the stronger speaker to help the weaker are
reinforced.
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Specialist Speakers
Some debaters would rather cut out their own tongue than speak in
the Prime Ministers position. Some love to summarize, drawing the
themes of the debate together reflectively. Others naturally generate
new arguments and ideas and love to speak third rather than fourth.
Every role on the table is subtly distinct. It follows, therefore,
that you need to adapt to your role to perform well in a debate. A
team comprising two people who cannot lay out a good definition
and solid case will struggle in Opening Government, however well
they do during the rest of the day. A team with two summarizers
may find it hard to fulfill their charge, in Closing Government and
Closing Opposition, to come up with a case that is new, interesting,
and important.
You can respond in two ways. The first is to say that a debater
should be an all-rounder, able to excel everywhere and adapt to any
situation. If you believe this, you will tell your debaters to overcome
their reticence and try to improve their abilities in those positions
they dislike. The second is to accommodate these natural preferences (and strengths) by teaming up your speakers in a way that
takes preferences into account.
In a new club, I would try to avoid people self-defining in this
way. It can be used as an excuse for laziness and a reason to stop
learning. But, where you have a lot of competition for few places,
it can be a useful tiebreaker. A more versatile speaker will be of
greater value and so her preferences (and her strengths) are relevant
grounds for selection.
Character-based Selection
Jan is an outwardly confident, talkative, and decisive person who
likes the big picture and wants to get things done quickly. Chris is
quiet, a good listener, who likes to weigh up all views in detail before
coming down strongly on a position. Would they make a good team?
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Regulars or Rotation
Another dimension to the selection question, however you resolve
it, is whether to pursue your chosen course consistently over time.
Long-term partnerships will often use tournaments as steppingstones for a more distant journey. So, if you know that a team will be
going to Worlds in December, you might offer them opportunities
to speak together at tournaments in October and November. This
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to help ensure that they are totally independent. Trials are highly
pressured, which creates conditions like a real tournament, and
they may seem a more scientific way to differentiate between
candidates.
But trials are not a simple solution. You need to decide whether
individuals will debate in the same team throughout the trials or
rotate. Do you assign individuals to a team or do they self-select?
If rotating, who decides and how? Then you need to hold enough
debates so that everyone gets a chance in different positions. If
someone dislikes the Prime Minister position and yet is assigned it
in a trial, she may have difficulty performing effectively. The competitive nature of the trial may cut down on teamwork and leave
second speakers at a disadvantage, as their partners may have less
incentive to share information with them.
Once you realize how fractious the whole business of selection
can be, you might well choose to steer clear. If no great competition
for places exists, you may find that allowing debaters to form teams
themselves is workable. Even if you are over-subscribed, you could
pre-announce that anyone who wants to attend a given tournament
should email you their team name and members after, say, 3:00 on
Wednesdayand that you will select four teams on a first-comefirst-served basis. Or, you could set a deadline for teams and members and then draw the top four at random.
Attractive as it might be to duck the responsibility, what will
happen if your best speakers are not selected?; if the random draw
selects six males and rejects four females?; if one of your members
consistently cannot find a partner? Leaving it to chance can present
as many new problems as the old ones it solves.
I recommend selection based on observations over time, rather
than the examination conditions created by a trial. It is tempting to
say that a one-day event is fairer, but the small number of debates
and large number of variables bring that into question.
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ESL
Many debaters speak English as a second language. Some tournaments, especially the larger ones, recognize an English as a Second
Language champion alongside an overall champion. Worlds also has
an English as a Foreign Language category for those with a lower
level of facility with English.
Different rules govern both eligibility and how you become ESL
or EFL champion. If you are attending a tournament and English
is not your first language, you will usually be asked to say whether
you meet that tournaments criteria for inclusion. Among the questions officials may ask: Do you study in English? Have you lived in
an English-speaking country and for how long? Have you previously moved to elimination rounds in a major tournament? If they
determine that your proficiency in English enables you to compete
on an equal basis, then you may not be classified as ESL. Note that
rules differ between tournamentsyou may be ESL at one, but not
at another.
As an ESL speaker or team, you will compete on an equal footing
with other teams in the tournament during the preliminary rounds.
Then it gets complicated. If you make the main break, congratulations! You will then progress to the knock-out rounds. But you will
also have made the ESL break, thus becoming eligible for the ESL
knock-out rounds. Some competitions will deem you ineligible for
the ESL break because you made the main break, others will let you
compete in both.
In those ESL knock-out roundsat Worlds the break is to quarterfinals, at other tournaments to semifinals or just a finalthe
adjudicators pick the best two teams from each debate to progress
until only four teams remain to compete in the final. Once you get
to the final, adjudicators select only the winning team.
Thats how to win as a team. But you can also be chosen as the
best individual ESL speaker. There is more complication here. Some
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Holding Competitions
osting tournaments is a tried-and-tested way to develop a thriving debate club. By attending tournaments, you can send a few
students to other societies to pick up tips and return with them. By
hosting a tournament, you can bring hundreds of students and adjudicators directly to your school. Wherever Worlds Style debate has
taken root, it has grown around new institutions holding competitions that attract established institutions and competitors.
The most recent hosts of Worlds were Botswana and Turkey.
Neither is a traditional debating powerhouse, but, for both, Worlds
was the culmination of a long process. Over several years, on the
path toward holding Worlds, they hosted competitions as an integral part of their strategy to develop debate.
This section advises you how to run an excellent tournament. As
this is a practical guide, I have striven to include unwritten rules and
popular conventions alongside the technical basics.
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Chief Adjudicator
Sponsorship
University Liaison
Advertising
Registration
Venues
Accommodations
Food and Drink
Social Events
Equity
Prizes
Runners
Announcements
The list is long and explains why Convenors like to have a committee of volunteers to help them. Effective delegation is essential
for a large tournament and healthy for a small one. You can divide
the roles and responsibilities in any number of ways to suit the
strengths of your committee members and the tasks that must be
accomplished. Lets go through each and show how it fits in to the
typical tournament.
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Chief Adjudicator
Alongside the Convenor, the Chief Adjudicator is the most crucial
person involved in running a tournament, which is why they have
a section to themselves below in this chapter. The Convenor needs
to find an individual with extensive adjudication experience and the
ability to manage the tournament on the day. If nobody within your
debate club meets that description, an outsider is usually invited to
serve as Chief Adjudicator. Deputy Chief Adjudicators of upcoming
global and regional championships can often be persuaded to act as
Chief Adjudicators for other tournaments.
Sponsorship
Debating competitions attract large numbers of intelligent, highly
articulate undergraduates. Companies that recruit graduates are
on the lookout for opportunities to meet the best and brightest,
and some will be eager to associate their names and brands with a
debating event.
If you approach companies in the right way, you may be able to
attract sponsorship. If you get it wrong, you may get knocked back
a few times and lose heart. Having received lots of approaches from
debating societies in my days as a graduate recruiter, I must honestly
say that most letters I received were terrible.
The most important rule: You must articulate the benefits that
will accrue to their businesses if you hope to have them offer funds!
In general, potential sponsors will be interested in scale, prestige, and possibilities for and level of contact. The greater the number of students touched by and involved in the event, the better. The
more prestigious your tournament, the more likely they are to sign
on as partners. Many sponsors like to send a representative to give
out material at a desk, talk to participants, and be a visible part of
the grand final. This direct contact with potential employees can be
valuable to them. They will also expect a mention and logo on your
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University Liaison
Some universities view their debating societies as a jewel in their
crown, helping them by offering debaters extraordinary opportunities and crucial life skills. To others, debating is just another student
society, standing in line for budgetary crumbs alongside the Subaqua Society, Capoeira Society, and the table tennis squad.
Whatever the debating societys standing at your institution, a
closer relationship with your university leaders and decision makers
can never be bad.
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Advertising
To make your tournament a success, you need people to attend. To
get them there, they need to know it is happening. They also need
to want to attend. You must advertise!
Include the following basic information in all your promotional
material:
venue
dates and times
team cap (the maximum number of teams you can accommodate), entrance fee per team, and the cut-off date for fee refunds
registration deadline
number of rounds
the names of the core adjudication teamthe Chief Adjudicator
and any Deputy Chief Adjudicators
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Registration
When you advertise the tournament, be sure to include three crucial
pieces of information: the team cap, the deadline for registration,
and how to register.
Your team cap is the maximum number of teams you can accommodate at your tournament. The limit may be determined by the
number of adjudicators you expect to have available or the number
of rooms free for debates. Worlds has upward of 400 teams. The
smallest viable tournaments have 16 or 20.
The deadline for registration is irrelevant if you expect to hit
your team cap. But if finding teams is a struggle, it can be good to
set a date and then review your progress. Lets say you budgeted for
40 teams and only 28 have registered by the week preceding your
tournament. You have optionsextra advertising, cutting registration fees, shaving off some costsrather than being faced with a
smaller, loss-making tournament on the day.
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Registration might be done via email, your website, or telephone. The tough part is translating names on a spreadsheet into
paying teams. I would strongly advise you to seek prepayment. Once
teams have paid for their places, the chances of last-minute absence
are reduced. But money in advance can be a struggle. You have very
little leverage unless you are over-subscribed. Worlds hosts are now
able to secure early payment because the competition for places is
so fierce. Most tournaments have to accept fees on arrival.
Encourage teams to bring adjudicators. It may enable you to
raise your team cap, giving you a larger tournament (and more registration fees). If you can, enforce the N-1 rulethis requires an
institution to send a number of adjudicators equal to the number of
teams minus one. Again, this will broaden the pool of adjudicators.
Everything listed above represents hard work in advance of the
tournament. Thats why many Organizing Committees appoint a
Registration Director with responsibility for handling these issues.
When people arrive at the tournament, the work continues.
Youll need a few people to write down team names, the names of
individuals in each team, and the names of adjudicatorsthey will
need a table and chairs. Teams need to pay and will want a receipt.
If they need permission or passes to enter any part of the building
or attend the social, you should give those out at registration. In
addition, everyone will need a timetable, a map of the campus, and
emergency telephone numbers in case they get lost. If you have an
equity policy, attendees need to have a copy. A registration packet
can be quite large.
Once registration is complete, an accurate list of teams, competitors, and adjudicators will need to be provided to the tab room.
Venues
Debate competitions are usually held on a university campus. The
finals, with the biggest audiences, are sometimes held elsewhere,
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Accommodations
The majority of university debating competitions are two-day events
held over a weekend. People need somewhere to stay and will look
to you for guidance.
The minimalist approach is to provide informationa list of
local hotels, motels, and bed and breakfastsleaving participants
to find their own place to stay. This is cheap and easy for you, but
may reduce numbers if people cannot afford to attend.
The next step up is to offer people crashspace on the sofas,
rugs, and floors of your societies memberswith information
about B&Bs, hotels, and motels for those who want to pay for extra
comfort.
If you have rooms on campus, in dormitories, or are running the
tournament at a hotel, then you can include accommodation in the
price of the registration fee.
Be careful about prepaying for accommodation. The final number of attendees is usually lower than the number who tell you they
are comingunless you have their money in your hand. Fewer
people need fewer bedrooms, so ensure that you are not left out of
pocket.
Registration is the best time to hand people their keys or introduce them to their host. Make sure you keep a list of who is staying
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Social Events
In a world of rich cultural diversity, there must be an endless variety of ways that debaters like to unwind. In many places, for many
people, the social is the most important part of a debating weekend.
Debates come and go, and almost everyone returns home without
a trophy. Yet people still come back. Time spent catching up with
friends, sharing stories, and having fun is tremendously valuable to
the people you want to attend.
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Equity
In recent years, the role of Equity Officer has emerged at major
tournaments, grown in scope, and started to filter down to regional
and local tournaments. The Equity Officer is responsible for ensuring that participants receive fair treatment at the tournament. He
or she is designated as a person to whom debaters can complain if
they believe they have been discriminated against or mistreated in
any way.
In the rules, adjudicators are empowered to take action against
a speaker who harasses others. An Equity Officer is for all other
issuesif the harassment is by an adjudicator or outside a debate.
If you decide not to appoint an Equity Officer, it is good practice to
think through how you would handle such a complaint.
Happily, a very small number of complaints on grounds of equity
have been made at major tournaments, and a far smaller number
upheld.
Prizes
If you ever win Worlds, you will get a trophy so large and ornate that
you will struggle to get it through Customs. Expectations are much
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Runners
Once the tournament begins, everything happens at breakneck
speed. Communication is important to handle issues as they arise.
Results need to be reported to the tab room at the earliest possible
moment.
You need runners. Runners are members of your debating society wearing readily identifiable T-shirts or badges. They are there
to help people when they get lost, walk competitors to their rooms,
communicate to the tab room if a team doesnt show up. Runners
play a critical role in ensuring a tournament runs on schedule. When
the time allotted to adjudicators ends, runners take the ballot from
each room and return it to the tab room. These are unglamorous
tasks, but good runners are very important to any tournament. They
will need to have you and your committee members express appreciation and also public recognition.
Announcements
Announcements usually are the responsibility of the Convenor who
is best placed to relay information about registration, social events,
accommodations, or room changes because she or he oversees these
processes and ensures that they are running smoothly.
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Chief Adjudicator
The Chief Adjudicator (CA) is the most visible person at a debate
competition. She or he delivers the briefings, handles questions,
makes the major announcements, and presents the breakwhere
the hopes and dreams of so many are confounded for another week.
Alongside the Convenor, the CA is the public face of a tournament. She also has many responsibilities behind the scenesall to
make sure the tournament runs accurately and on schedule.
At larger tournaments, the CA may also have Deputy Chief Adjudicators (DCAs) to help him with his responsibilities. Together,
they are known as the core adjudication team. At Worlds, effort is
made to ensure that DCAs are drawn from different parts of the
globe, thus reflecting the diversity of the tournament.
The CA also may be assisted by a Tournament Director, whose
grand title compensates her for the fact that her job is to run the tab.
Below is a guide to the CAs responsibilities, written to aid anyone
taking on this role.
Timetable
The CA is responsible for the smooth running of the tournament
from the moment all the teams have arrived to the presentation of
prizes. Before that point, the Convenor is in command. To stop that
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Registration ends
Round 1
Round 2
Social
Saturday
8:00 am
9:00
10:30
12:00
1:00 pm
2:30
4:00
5:30
7:00
9:00
11:00
Breakfast
Round 3
Round 4
Lunch
Round 5
Round 6
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Dinner
Social
This schedule cannot work. Lets start with registration on Friday. If Registration ends promptly at 6:00, and Round 1 starts at
6:30, that leaves 30 minutes to perform the following tasks: The data
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A timetable must be realistic. Two hours between rounds is sensible for a small tournament, with a little extra time at the beginning
and end of the day.
The Chief Adjudicator must help the Convenor think about
the implications of the timetable for the tournament and plan
accordingly.
Motion Setting
The Chief Adjudicator, aided by her DCAs, is responsible for setting all of the motions. Secrecy is important as debaters must not
find out about a motion before it is announced. Therefore, the number of people who know the topics should be kept to an absolute
minimum.
Motions should be set before the tournament. Normally, the
CA wants to come up with a range of different topical issues.
Breadth makes the tournament more interesting and challenging
international relations, sports, issues around reproduction, economic policy, legal reform, development, the environment, and so
on. At Worlds, the core adjudication team needs to write more than
20 motions to cover the preliminaries, main break, ESL break, EFL
break, and Masters, where adjudicators compete.
Motions should normally be closed. A closed motion is one that
gives Opening Government a very clear idea of the policy intended.
This House Would Allow Parents Using IVF to Select the Sex of
Their Child leaves very little wiggle room for the Opening Government. They could add, If they have already lost a child of that
gender or some other condition, though this move is hard to justify
and adds as many questions as it answers. They could also, arguably,
go further and say, In fact, we have no objection to any genetic engineering of children, a bolder position. But, they could not argue
that IVF should be banned or that doctors should select the gender
or anything else that goes against the spirit of the motion. This
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This House Believes Iraq Is Better Off Now Than Before the War
This House Believes Feminism Has Damaged Motherhood
This House Believes the Welfare State Has Hurt the Poor
Analysis debates are rare, but as they occasionally happen at
Worlds and regional tournaments, they are sometimes set at university competitions to help debaters practice for them.
If you need inspiration to generate motions, websites containing
thousands of ideas and examples from the past are available with
the click of a mouse. But the best motions are current and live
not theoretical constructs but issues that affect peoples lives today.
Even if they are twists on old topics, you can do worse than opening
the weeks newspapers and picking out stories. Having a team of
DCAs certainly helps to spread the load.
The topics for the European Universities Debating Championships in Tallinn, Estonia, at which I was Chief Adjudicator, were:
Round 1: This House Would Require People to Work in Return
for Welfare Payments
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Briefing
Every tournament starts with a briefing by the Chief Adjudicator.
He will introduce himself and the DCAs, then together they will
provide participants with all the information they need to understand and take part in the tournament.
Speakers need to know how many rounds to expect, the length
of speeches, and after which rounds they can expect verbal feedback. Adjudicators need to understand their duties. How long do
they have to make a decision? What happens to their ballot? They
also need to know when verbal adjudication ends. Most tournaments do not reveal results in the last one or two preliminary rounds
to keep an element of suspense surrounding the break.
At major tournaments, briefing can be a long process. Sometimes, organizers offer an optional separate briefing that reviews the
rules for beginners. A main briefing is always held; its purpose is to
recap the rules and detail the core adjudication teams interpretation
of key points in the rules. They may have specific areas that they
want to highlight and encourage.
Debaters usually ask plenty of questions at a briefing. The CA
must make sure the chief adjudication pool has agreed on an answer
before committing to a position. Getting back to someone after conferring with the team is better than tying yourself to a mistake.
Last, perhaps most important, the CA should try to make the
briefing fun and welcoming. She has anything from 10 minutes
to an hour of peoples attention. The CA is the only person standing between debaters and their judges and the competition. It is a
chance to set a great tone for the weekend.
Adjudicator Assignment
At major tournaments, great care is taken to ensure the fairness
of rankings for adjudicators. There are potentially more than 300
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Results
Accurate results rely on a robust process being followed across the
tournament. Every Chair should take a ballot from the briefing
room to his room. Depending on the tab program in use, this ballot may already have the room number, teams, speakers, and team
positions nicely printed out.
If not, or if anything is missing, the Chair is still responsible for
making sure that results are filled in properly. Before the debate
begins, the Chair should check the team names and ask the order
of speakers for each team. When the debate is over and the panel
discussion has come to a close, he should take responsibility for
filling in the final decision on the ballot.
Mistakes can happen. The most common mistake to avoid is
confusing team points (3, 2, 1, 0) with position (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th),
so a well-designed ballot asks the Chair to write in both next to
each team. The second most common mistake is getting aggregate
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Speaker Scale
When I started debating, three separate speaker scales were in common use: the 30-point scale, 40-point scale, and 100-point scale. Not
only was there no standardization between scaleswithin those
competitions that preferred the 30-point scale, some used the whole
scale, whereas others started at 15 and went no higher than 26. Each
adjudicator had her own idea, or no idea, about how to assign points
to speakers. Now the 100-point scale is ubiquitous and adjudicators
are much clearer about the meaning of a 55, 70, or 85. Below is the
standard from the Worlds rules:
Grade
Mark
Meaning
90100
8089
7079
6069
5059
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Tabulation
The tab is a system for recording results and determining who
debates against whom. It is normally controlled by one persona
separate Tournament Director or the Chief Adjudicator. The subject
of tabulation could take an entire book, although I doubt anyone
would read it. I will be brief and concentrate on the essentials.
Long gone are the days when finalists were selected by the CA
wandering around, having chats with a few trusted lieutenants, asking, Have you seen anyone really good? Gone also are the days
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Team Points
Speaker Points
Position
Steel A
165
Caxford B
154
MST A
161
MST B
152
Lardon
155
Abifield
151
Steel B
140
Caxford A
136
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Speaker Points
Position
Steel A
Team Name
321
MST A
315
Abifield
305
Caxford B
304
Caxford A
296
MST B
288
Lardon
292
Steel B
264
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in 2004, where I was a DCA, and has been improved by several people since.
A great advantage of Tabbie is that it allows you to be precise
about where you assign adjudicators. You can enter and update a rating for each judge, then, at any time, you can change the formula by
which you assign them. Thus, you can have all your strongest adjudicators as Chairs early in the tournament, then, when it becomes
numerically impossible for some teams to break later on, put two
experienced judges in your top rooms to ensure that the best possible decisions are made where it counts.
Once the preliminary rounds are over, your tabbing work is
almost done. Competitors will expect a printout of the team tab
(showing the final rankings) and the speaker tab to compare notes,
curse their bad luck, and see where they went right or wrong.
Feedback on Adjudicators
Feedback on adjudicators is really useful to the core adjudication
team. Your initial ranking of judges can always be improved based
on observations made during the tournament. This can either be
formalized, as it is at major tournaments, or kept to informal conversations; either way, you should remain open to adjudicators moving
up and down your ranking.
A formal system involves a lot of paper. Teams are each given a
feedback form on which they write whether they came 1st, 2nd, 3rd,
or 4th and how satisfied they were with the Chairs verbal adjudication. This helps to assess how the various Chairs are doing. Treat
this kind of feedback with caution. If the teams who came 1st, 2nd,
and 3rd all gave great feedback to the Chair, but the last-place team
said she was terrible, that colors the reliability of that feedback.
However, if a winning team complain that the decision was a poor
one, you know you have a situation worth investigating.
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In addition to these forms, all of which must be read and considered by the CA and DCAs, there are forms for the Chair in each
room to give feedback on their wings. The purpose of these is to
identify potential Chairs, perhaps less experienced adjudicators
who have quickly found their feet, and to spot those who cant or
wont apply the rules.
If your tournament is smaller, you might choose to keep these
chats informal. It is a good idea to hear from Chairs about wings
with potential. Teams should be free to come to you if they feel a
decision was not justified by the rules. You cant change the results!
But you can assign one of your team to judge with someone whose
adjudication has come into question and then form your own
opinion.
Whatever the process, if you are using Tabbie, you can record
changes by altering the number assigned to each adjudicator up
or down. Otherwise, you will need to keep notes and check your
panels manually.
Handling Complaints
Complaints are part of any competitive activity. Debate is no different. Should debaters or other adjudicators feel that something
inappropriate has taken place in a debate, the Chief Adjudicator
has the ultimate responsibility of ensuring that the issue is resolved.
Nobody, not even the Chief Adjudicator, can change the result
of a debate once a decision has been made. Whatever result comes
back on the ballot from a Chair is always entered into the tab.
Within each debate, the adjudicators in the room decide the placings and speaker points. However eloquently you recount the tale,
the CA has no power to alter the decisions made by those who saw
the debate.
If adjudicators feel that a speaker has harassed another person,
then they may give them zero speaker points. This is a decision
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without appeal and extremely infrequent. The matter will not normally end there. Unacceptable behavior may lead to additional
action from the organizers or even the host university if it has a
harassment policy that a debater is alleged to have breached.
If the adjudicators do not act, and a debater feels that the
behavior of another speaker was unacceptable, this is a matter for
the Equity Officer (if you appoint one) or the Convenor to handle.
Should a debater feel that an adjudicator behaved inappropriately,
then the hearing should involve both the Chief Adjudicator and the
Equity Officer (if you appoint one) or the Convenor. Unless a formal
process has been put in place, the usual approach is to first hear the
complaint, then the adjudicators side of the story, call witnesses if
necessary, and then take action. An adjudicator could be kicked out
or, depending on the findings, no action might be taken.
Ninety-nine percent of complaints are about the result. Of those,
most are made by teams finishing third and fourth, who felt that
they should have come in first or second. Complaints can be minimized if a formal process exists for handling feedback on Chairs.
The CA will only take action, under normal circumstances, if
there is a pattern of bad feedback on a certain adjudicator. Comments from a winning team that criticize the Chair will carry special weight, because, presumably, there is no self-interest behind
them. Possible action includes babysittingputting an experienced judge with the adjudicator in question for a round to check
out how he performsor downgrading him from a Chair to a Wing
for future rounds.
The Break
Most teams go out at the break, so it is a moment of emotion. It can
also be a moment of drama, particularly at Worlds with hundreds
of people drowning out the sound system, yet listening intently for
their team name to be called.
Holding Competitions
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ESL
If you are running a separate ESL break, you need to plan in advance.
First, be clear about your eligibility criteria. You could operate
a system based on trust, which accepts that anyone who shows up
and claims to speak English as a second language can compete as
ESL. Alternatively (as is done at major tournaments), you might try
to police it, setting criteria and interviewing individuals to check
that they qualify.
Second, decide whether you want to recognize individual speakers or just teams. If you dont have a top ESL speaker award but do
plan an ESL final, then this decision will be easy! Whatever you
decide, the information needs to be fixed and finalized before the
tournament begins because it has to be entered into the tab.
Third, think through your policy if an ESL-eligible team or
teams make it to the main break as well as the ESL break. Will you
allow them to compete in both? Will you only permit them to speak
in the main break, allowing another team the opportunity to compete in the ESL break? Competitors deserve to know the ground
rules in advance.
When it comes to the break, make sure to retain enough adjudicators to cover the ESL break rounds as well. Think about whether
you want to assign your best adjudicators to the ESL final, as if it
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Elimination Rounds
Elimination rounds have a particular pattern of seeding to reward
teams who have been most successful in the preliminary rounds.
There is a convention governing how teams break. It should follow the pattern of folding I set forth earlier: [1, 8, 9, 16], [2, 7, 10, 15],
[3, 6, 11, 14], [4, 5, 12, 13] if 16 teams break; [1, 4, 5, 8] and [2, 3, 6, 7]
if 8 teams break.
If you have quarterfinals, then when you move to semis, you
should fold the teams again: The two teams progressing from [1, 8, 9,
16] should compete against the two teams who make it through [4,
5, 12, 13] while the two teams progressing from [2, 7, 10, 15] meet two
from [3, 6, 11, 14]. It is possible, using this system, that two teams,
if they keep progressing, will meet each other in the quarterfinals,
semifinals, and final!
In elimination rounds, the adjudication panel is often expanded
from three to five, seven, or nine. Until the final, their job is to
advance two teams. No winner is announced, no order, no speaker
points, no verbal feedback. With larger panels, reaching agreement
(and thus the result) can take a long time. The CAs job is to impose
discipline and keep things moving.
Holding Competitions
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The Final
At a final, plenty is usually going on besides debating. Representatives of the sponsors, the university hierarchy, students from the
host university, even members of the public may come to get an
experience of debate by attending your final. They need to be welcomed and warmed upthis is traditionally part of the Convenors
role. The motion is announced and teams are given the usual 15 minutes to prepare while a series of announcements, reflections, and
thanks are offered.
The final will have a panel of seven or nine adjudicators. A
Speaker, facing the audience, is appointed to keep order, introduce
the debaters, and keep time. When the adjudicators retire to deliberate, the wait begins for a decision. Typically, at least 20 minutes
pass before a final panel reaches a decisionit can take as long as 2
hours, unless the CA is firm about bringing the matter to a vote. As
the CA chairs the final panel, it is within his or her power.
Some tournaments fill this wait with a floor debate. Anyone from
the audience can come forward and make a short speech in furtherance of the Government or Opposition. By alternating between the
two sides, the Speaker can ensure the debate continues even after
the final has concluded. It is a great way to keep people involved
and, if your invited sponsor/faculty/public want a result to round off
their evening, a good time filler. But floor debates have been mocked
as a chance for those who didnt make the final to show why.
The alternative path, more often taken, is to leave the adjudicators sweating and fighting in a small room while everyone else goes
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to the dinner or social event. However long the panel takes to confer,
people are enjoying themselvesexcept for those teams sweating
on the results! Once the decision is in, the CA will announce it.
Prizes are usually given for best speaker, top speaker on the tab, and
so on, before the winning team is finally declared.
The debating is over and the fun can begin.
Holding Competitions
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Conclusion
Variety
Rather than just having a debate every week, try to mix things up. A
full Worlds Style debate, plus time for preparation and adjudication,
can take a full two hours, so it can be hard to find additional time for
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Expertise
Use every last bit of knowledge and skill at your disposal. When you
send people to tournaments, as speakers or adjudicators, get them
to share what they learned with the whole club. Make them prepare
a short session on their top tip. Experience needs to be recycled.
Utilize all the resources you can get your hands on to train debaters properly. Books, online tutorials, video recordings of debates
are all at your disposal. Giving uninformed feedback can set back
a group of novice debaters despite the best intentions of the coach.
Worlds Style debate is what it is, not what you or I want it to be. We
have a duty to teach debaters how to succeed and to be clear where
we deviate from that approach to let speakers make up their own
minds.
Invite trainers to visit your debate club and teach you. The worst
they can say is no. For the cost of travel and an overnight sofa, you
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Opportunity
Give people incentives to be a part of your club. Send as many as possible to competitions. Make your sessions inclusive and your training relevant to newcomers. Avoid jargon and keep things informal.
Invite other clubs to come and experience what you are doing
internally and externally. Undoubtedly, some students at your institution are interested in the issues you discuss but dont attend your
meetings. Get them therejust onceand theres a good chance
they will come again.
Find forums and opportunities for debate. Keep up-to-date not
only with tournaments and conferences but also with online competitions that can help to develop critical skillsfor example, the
World Online Debating Championships (http://debatewise.org/
wodc).
Whatever you do, wherever debating takes youenjoy it and
good luck.
Conclusion
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Online Resources
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Debatewise
http://www.debatewise.org
The home of online debate, Debatewise features arguments on a
wide range of current topics and boasts a searchable resource of
all its debates going back over several years. It is a great place to
hone your analytical skills, comment on others arguments, vote on
debates, and enter a community of online debaters. Debatewise also
hosts the annual World Online Debating Championships.
British Debate
http://www.britishdebate.com/calendar
Despite its name, the British Debate calendar carries listings of tournaments held across Europe. If you are based in Europe or coming to
Europe and want to know what opportunities are available, BD (as
it is fondly known) will tell you what tournaments are coming up.
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Definitional Challenges
Yet as a judge, I have only seen a definitional challenge in perhaps 1 percent of debates.
People are fascinated by the worst case scenario and desperate
to know what to do. If Opening Government squirrels [set a definition outside the spirit of the motion] and Opening Opposition gives
a bad definition, then Opening Government doesnt accept their
definition, then Closing Government comes up with another definition, do we in Closing Opposition follow Opening Government,
Closing Government, or our colleagues in Opening Opposition?
It is bizarre what keeps people awake at night.
The really useful adviceJust debate better than them
doesnt get to the heart of the technical question, so is unsatisfactory
to the questioner. Lets take a look at the rules in detail:
The definition must:
(a) have a clear and logical link to the motionan average reasonable person would accept the link made by the
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Appendixes
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or suggesting your own. The only option not open to you, unless
Closing Government supported Opening Governments definition,
is to take the dramatically satisfying path of going back to the beginning and arguing against Opening Governments definition.
I have only witnessed the worst case scenario once, and that was
more than ten years ago. There is no skill less worth your time and
worry than how to challenge.
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WUDC World
Parliamentary
Debating Rules
Part 1Introduction*
1.1
1.1.1 The debate will consist of four teams of two persons (persons
will be known as members), a chairperson (known as the Speaker
of the House or Mister/Madame Speaker and a panel of adjudicators. In the absence of a chairperson, the Chair of the panel of
adjudicators will act as the chairperson.
1.1.2 Teams will consist of the following members:
Opening Government:
Prime Minister or First Government member and
Deputy Prime Minister or Second Government member;
Opening Opposition:
Leader of the Opposition or First Opposition member
and
N.B. The numbering, order and wording of these rules reflects a proposed tidy-up
put to Worlds Council 2012.
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The motion
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1.3
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Preparation
Points of Information
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The adjudication
Part 2 Definitions
2.1
The definition
2.1.1 The definition should state the issue (or issues) for debate
arising out of the motion and state the meaning of any terms in the
motion which require interpretation.
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Part 3 Case
3.1 A case, or team line, is a policy, course of action or state of
affairs that a team supports and the reasons for which they support
it. Opening Government and Opening Opposition should put a
case. Closing Government and Closing Opposition should support
the same policy, course of action or state of affairs as their opening
counterparts but may use different supporting arguments.
Part 4 Matter
4.1
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Assessing matter
Part 5 Manner
5.1
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Ranking teams
6.2.1 Teams should be ranked from first place to last place. First
placed teams should be awarded three points, second placed
teams should be awarded two points, third placed teams should be
awarded one point and fourth placed teams should be awarded zero
points.
6.2.2 Teams may receive zero points where they fail to arrive at the
debate more than five minutes after the scheduled time for debate.
6.2.3 Teams may receive zero points where the adjudicators unanimously agree that the Member has (or Members have) harassed
another debater on the basis of religion, sex, race, color, nationality,
sexual preference or disability.
6.2.4 Adjudicators should confer upon team rankings. Where a
unanimous decision cannot be reached after conferral, the decision of the majority will determine the rankings. Where a majority
decision cannot be reached, the Chair of the panel of adjudicators
will determine the rankings.
6.3
6.3.1 The panel of adjudicators should agree upon the mark that
each individual member is to be awarded.
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Mark
Meaning
90100
8089
7079
6069
5059
6.3.3 The aggregate of each teams speaker points should correspond to the position of that team in the debate, i.e., the aggregate
of the winning teams speaker points must exceed the aggregate of
the team coming second, which must exceed the aggregate speaker
points of the third-placed team, which must exceed the aggregate
speaker points of team placed fourth.
6.4 Verbal adjudications
6.4.1 At the conclusion of the conferral, the adjudication panel
should provide a verbal adjudication of the debate.
6.4.2 The verbal adjudication should be delivered by the Chair of
the adjudication panel or, where the Chair dissents, by a member of
the adjudication panel nominated by the Chair of the panel.
6.4.3 The verbal adjudication should:
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Worlds Hosts
and Winners
Year
Hosts
2012
De La Salle, Philippines
2011
University of Botswana
Monash
2010
Koc, Turkey
Sydney
2009
UCC, Ireland
Oxford
2008
Assumption, Thailand
Oxford
2007
UBC, Canada
Sydney
2006
UCD, Ireland
Toronto
2005
MMU, Malaysia
Ottawa
2004
NTU, Singapore
Middle Temple
2003
Cambridge
2002
Toronto, Canada
New York
2001
Glasgow, Scotland
Sydney
2000
Sydney, Australia
Monash
1999
Monash
1998
Grays Inn
1997
Glasgow
1996
UCC, Ireland
Macquarie
1995
Princeton, USA
UNSW
Winners
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Year
Hosts
Winners
1994
Melbourne, Australia
Glasgow
1993
Oxford, England
Harvard
1992
TCD, Ireland
Glasgow
1991
Toronto, Canada
McGill
1990
Glasgow, Scotland
Yale
1989
Princeton, USA
Sydney
1988
Sydney, Australia
Oxford
1987
UCD, Ireland
Glasgow
1986
Fordham, USA
UCC
1985
McGill, Canada
Kings Inns
1984
Edinburgh, Scotland
Sydney
1983
Princeton, USA
Glasgow
1982
Toronto, Canada
Auckland
1981
Glasgow, Scotland
Toronto
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Glossary
Terms you need to understand,
words debaters like to say.
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Glossary
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Glossary
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