The Health of an IV

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We have many standards for evaluating the health of a debate program: Competitive success, percentage of new members, percentage of retention of second year debaters, amounts of minority and women participants, diversity of majors and courses of study, and the list goes on. Most debate clubs, if wise, are looking at these numbers occasionally to gage the health of their debating society.

Do we have such metrics for our tournaments?
It seems that one of the only ways we have to evaluate the health of a tournament is by popularity, or “everyone says” that the tournament is good. This is a hermeneutic circle – the tournament is good because everyone agrees it was good last year, etc. Or worse, name recognition.
There are some better metrics you might argue – the quality of the CA, the diversity and quality of the DCAs, etc. But how do we know these people are good? Again, it has the risk of becoming another hermeneutic circle – the good debater is a good CA because she was a good debater.
Perhaps one metric, due to the cheapness and availability of digital video, is having a look at the quality of the final round. I think this metric is incomplete, but offers a way of getting a bearing at least on how the tournament is doing.
This weekend is the annual University of Massachusetts, Amherst tournament, and I think it might be a good candidate for trying this out. Here is a link to the final round from last year’s tournament. 
[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/7554277 w=400&h=300]<p>UMass Amherst Final 2009 – Banning embedded journalists from Steve Llano on Vimeo.</p>

The Health of an IV

Image via

Wikipedia

We have many standards for evaluating the health of a debate program: Competitive success, percentage of new members, percentage of retention of second year debaters, amounts of minority and women participants, diversity of majors and courses of study, and the list goes on. Most debate clubs, if wise, are looking at these numbers occasionally to gage the health of their debating society.

Do we have such metrics for our tournaments?
It seems that one of the only ways we have to evaluate the health of a tournament is by popularity, or “everyone says” that the tournament is good. This is a hermeneutic circle – the tournament is good because everyone agrees it was good last year, etc. Or worse, name recognition.
There are some better metrics you might argue – the quality of the CA, the diversity and quality of the DCAs, etc. But how do we know these people are good? Again, it has the risk of becoming another hermeneutic circle – the good debater is a good CA because she was a good debater.
Perhaps one metric, due to the cheapness and availability of digital video, is having a look at the quality of the final round. I think this metric is incomplete, but offers a way of getting a bearing at least on how the tournament is doing.
This weekend is the annual University of Massachusetts, Amherst tournament, and I think it might be a good candidate for trying this out. Here is a link to the final round from last year’s tournament. 
[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/7554277 w=400&h=300]<p>UMass Amherst Final 2009 – Banning embedded journalists from Steve Llano on Vimeo.</p>

The Health of an IV

Image via

Wikipedia

We have many standards for evaluating the health of a debate program: Competitive success, percentage of new members, percentage of retention of second year debaters, amounts of minority and women participants, diversity of majors and courses of study, and the list goes on. Most debate clubs, if wise, are looking at these numbers occasionally to gage the health of their debating society.

Do we have such metrics for our tournaments?
It seems that one of the only ways we have to evaluate the health of a tournament is by popularity, or “everyone says” that the tournament is good. This is a hermeneutic circle – the tournament is good because everyone agrees it was good last year, etc. Or worse, name recognition.
There are some better metrics you might argue – the quality of the CA, the diversity and quality of the DCAs, etc. But how do we know these people are good? Again, it has the risk of becoming another hermeneutic circle – the good debater is a good CA because she was a good debater.
Perhaps one metric, due to the cheapness and availability of digital video, is having a look at the quality of the final round. I think this metric is incomplete, but offers a way of getting a bearing at least on how the tournament is doing.
This weekend is the annual University of Massachusetts, Amherst tournament, and I think it might be a good candidate for trying this out. Here is a link to the final round from last year’s tournament. 

The Health of an IV

Image via

Wikipedia

We have many standards for evaluating the health of a debate program: Competitive success, percentage of new members, percentage of retention of second year debaters, amounts of minority and women participants, diversity of majors and courses of study, and the list goes on. Most debate clubs, if wise, are looking at these numbers occasionally to gage the health of their debating society.

Do we have such metrics for our tournaments?
It seems that one of the only ways we have to evaluate the health of a tournament is by popularity, or “everyone says” that the tournament is good. This is a hermeneutic circle – the tournament is good because everyone agrees it was good last year, etc. Or worse, name recognition.
There are some better metrics you might argue – the quality of the CA, the diversity and quality of the DCAs, etc. But how do we know these people are good? Again, it has the risk of becoming another hermeneutic circle – the good debater is a good CA because she was a good debater.
Perhaps one metric, due to the cheapness and availability of digital video, is having a look at the quality of the final round. I think this metric is incomplete, but offers a way of getting a bearing at least on how the tournament is doing.
This weekend is the annual University of Massachusetts, Amherst tournament, and I think it might be a good candidate for trying this out. Here is a link to the final round from last year’s tournament. 

Debate: Lowering the Income Gap

  
Download now or listen on posterous

REC001.MP3 (13517 KB)

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Wikipedia

I’ve been pretty bad about posting debates that I’ve recorded up here recently. I’ve been having some trouble getting my bad computers to work with editing or converting video, and I’ve also been sort of busy with life stuff. I hope to put up a bunch of videos soon.

In the meantime, here’s an audio debate from late January, when we had a scrimmage between Adelphi University, The King’s College, and St. John’s University here in New York City. The motion: This House believes that lowering the income gap should be a global priority.
Not sure of the teams in this debate, but have a listen. I liked the motion, even though it’s not really written in the typically accepted style that we are accustomed to these days.