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Case Construction Jr. H. Canadian National

This guide provides tips and strategies for constructing a strong government case in debates, including outlining arguments, presenting evidence, accepting points of information, and building a persuasive model. It also offers advice on constructing effective opposition arguments and countering the government's case.

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Case Construction Jr. H. Canadian National

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  1. Case ConstructionJr. H. Canadian National

  2. 1st Proposition Speech Statement of the Resolution Definition of Essential Terms (should be clear to the average person) Outline Arguments/Pillars Expand Arguments (evidence / proof) Accept 2 POIs

  3. 1st Proposition Speech Statement of the Resolution Definition of Essential Terms (should be clear to the average person) Outline Arguments/Pillars Expand Arguments (evidence / proof) Accept 2 POIs

  4. 1st Opposition Speech • Statement of the Resolution • Respond to Definition of Essential Terms • Most teams will accept the terms as defined • Can challenge the terms if unreasonable • If this happens, judges decide which terms are more reasonable (still possible for Aff. to win). • Clash with Proposition’s Arguments/Plan • Outline Own Arguments • Expand Arguments (evidence and proof) • 6. Accept a total of 2 POIs

  5. 2nd Proposition Speech Clash with 1st Opposition Arguments Restate Proposition Arguments Outline Final Arguments / Proof Accept 2 POIs

  6. 2nd Opposition Speech Clash with Proposition Arguments Restate Opposition Arguments Outline Final Arguments / Evidence Accept 2 POIs

  7. Building a government case • Make standalone contentions • Don't make them rely on each other • Keep up to date • Don’t skew the definitions to much to your side

  8. Building a government case cont. • You have something to prove • Need for change, what’s wrong with the status quo • Outline your plan, what’s good about it, why does it work? • Think about your alternatives, why is your solution better?

  9. What’s in a model? • Who – TH, actors, etc. • What – what are the actors doing • When – what is your timeframe • Where – this is pretty obvious, c’mon. • How – A basic plan, it’s not enough to say that you’re going to. • Why – your contentions

  10. What’s NOT in a model? • Funding • Nitty gritty legislation • If you’re proposing an invasion, you don’t need the battle plans! Let the experts deal with it • Cats

  11. Building the opposition case • You cannot win with just clash • OPP needs constructive points as to why the resolution should not pass • Think about what the gov’t might do, what is their model going to be? • Don’t make everything about the practicality of the resolution, try and focus more on logic and argumentation

  12. The anatomy of an argument

  13. What is an argument • Paradigm (your ideology and values) • Premises (your basic starting point) • Conclusion (argument ends here, this is what you proved) • Socrates is a man • all men are mortal • therefore Socrates is mortal

  14. Where do you build arguments from? • SPERM (Social/Political/Economic, Environmental/Regional/Moral, Military) • Forgotten actors • Statistics are useful support, but make them relevant to your argument • Don’t build your case around evidence

  15. Argument Progression • SEXL (Statement, Explanation, Example, Link) • Don’t base your entire case on making a lot of beautiful statements, without explanations and examples it’s useless • Continuously ask yourself “WHY?” (we must go deeper) • Premises should flow, make sure they can all be intertwined

  16. What’s an argument and what’s a subpoint? • An argument: stands on it’s own, contains subpoints • A subpoint: part of an argument, isn’t convincing on it’s own, a part of a series of gears • Group together your subpoints and make broad but through arguments

  17. Hung cases, attack the weak point for massive damage • What is that? An entire case where all arguments rely on a single idea • This is bad because if they take down that one idea then their entire case is done • Example: THBT Macs are better then PCs, Argument: Macs are more beautifully designed then PCs Assumption: Everyone has the same idea of beauty

  18. Conclusion • Paradigm -> Premises -> Conclusion • Make a good model • Support your statement • OPP can’t just clash • Always ask “WHY” • Don’t rely on assumptions • Always defend your arguments • Be confident, enjoy yourself, good luck.

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