1 / 16

High School Debates

High School Debates. What is Debating?. Formal and persuasive public speaking Is usually improvised or researched Investigates two sides of an issue Usually nuanced and refined- not polarized Arguments are evaluated and weighed by audience or judge Two forms: 1) Parliamentary; 2) Policy.

aretha
Download Presentation

High School Debates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. High School Debates

  2. What is Debating? • Formal and persuasive public speaking • Is usually improvised or researched • Investigates two sides of an issue • Usually nuanced and refined- not polarized • Arguments are evaluated and weighed by audience or judge • Two forms: 1) Parliamentary; 2) Policy

  3. Parliamentary Debate

  4. Components • Modeled on the Canadian Parliament • Impromptu style of debate which requires no background knowledge or research • Emphasis on rebuttal and cogent thinking • Ability to think under pressure and react • Four players: PM, MC, MO and LO • Resolution presented: 10 min. preparation • Structured and timed debate: 34 minutes

  5. Rules and Pointers • Respect all members of the debate • Refrain from talking to your partner while debate is in process – pass notes only • Do not make personal attacks or comments • Take copious notes during debate and number your points of argumentation and rebuttal • Address the speaker “Mr.” or “Madame Speaker” • Speak clearly and confidently • Make eye contact!

  6. Setting a Resolution • Students will only have 10-15 minutes to prepare for the debate • Resolution topics usually focus on world issues, pop-culture, media etc. • Government (PM and MC) define and refine resolution “Be it resolved that…” • Opposition has to anticipate Government arguments and resolution

  7. The Players The Speaker The Government: • “PM” stands for Prime Minister • “MC” stands for Minister of Crown The Opposition: • “MO” stands for Member of Opposition • “LO” stands for Leader of the Opposition

  8. The Speaker: impartial judge • Moderates • Takes notes

  9. The Prime Minister • Speech 7 minutes • Opens the debate • Defines the resolution at beginning of speech • States Government’s side and main points of its argument • Foreshadows MC speech

  10. Member of Opposition • Speech 7 minutes • “Fast thinker” • Rebuts PM’s points • Clarifies resolution • Counters Government’s case • Presents two or three opposition arguments

  11. Minister of the Crown • Speech 7 minutes • Second Speaker of Government • Refutes Opposition’s case respectfully • Reconstructs PM’s arguments • Adds constructive arguments

  12. Leader of the Opposition • Speech 10 minutes • Identifies debate’s fundamental philosophical principles • Strengthens Opposition’s case • No new arguments in last 3 minutes- only summary

  13. Prime Minister: Closing • Speech 3 minutes • No new arguments or points introduced • Summarizes and restates Government case • Rebuts LO points • Provides conclusion

  14. After the Debate • Speaker thanks the debaters for the debate • Debaters exit the room to allow speaker to reflect or speakers to confer- debaters called in • Speaker provides debaters with general comments and feed-back • Debaters should not “debate” speaker’s comments or become defensive • Speaker discloses “winning team” • N.B. during formal competitions, results not disclosed until formal period at end

  15. Sources McGill University Debating Union: www.ssmu.mcgill.ca/debate Canadian University Society for Intercollegiate Debate: www.cusid.ca For Policy Style i.e. US style Debate: Columbia University www.columbia.edu/cu/debate/oldsites/2002/styles.htm

  16. Find a Debate near you! • The Internet Brings More Harm than Good to Today’s Youth • Should Mobile Phone be Banned from School • Is TV Good or Bad for Students?

More Related