University of Vermont Final Round Video

there are more videos coming, but let’s start with the final round.

Motion: THB that black actors, comedians, musicians, and other public figures should not use the n-word.

Opening Government: Portland State University
Opening Opposition: St. John’s University, New York
Closing Government: Cornell University
Closing Opposition: Cornell University

The performance of each team was heavily praised by the audience. What do you think? It sparked a lot of conversation afterwards from everyone who saw it.

University of Vermont Final Round Video

there are more videos coming, but let’s start with the final round.

Motion: THB that black actors, comedians, musicians, and other public figures should not use the n-word.

Opening Government: Portland State University
Opening Opposition: St. John’s University, New York
Closing Government: Cornell University
Closing Opposition: Cornell University

The performance of each team was heavily praised by the audience. What do you think? It sparked a lot of conversation afterwards from everyone who saw it.

US Nationals 2010: Preface

Having a coffee waiting to give a judge briefing for an internal University debating competition here in Manhattan. The weather is fantastic. I have Germans sitting to the left of me, and Brits on the right (is this a song reference?). And tomorrow I head off to Denver for my third trip to the US Nationals in the BP format.

Thinking to a year ago it’s impressive to me how much better the quality of each round in the US is from tournament to tournament. I remember my first US Nats in this format thinking the final round was much worse than some of the late prelims I had judged. Not an unusual feeling since most of the tournaments I’d judged were on the East Coast, and we were beginners in this format.

Now I imagine how much different this nationals might be. On the East coast the quality of debate is quite good. On the West Coast, the teams are really solid. Meeting in the middle of the country is somewhat symbolic for our heavily regional BP practices. But we are inching toward a national circuit faster than I think most of us realize. And there’s very little reflection on our practices. I think Frans Van Eemeren puts it pretty well when he writes that the problem with American argumentation scholarship for the most part is that there has been traditionally an unproblematic link between the practice of debate and theorizing good argument. The relation is one that is unquestioned – practice in debating makes someone make good arguments (don’t have the book with me right now or I would cite it, I’ll add it here when I get back to my office). How ironic to be sitting between these Europeans and thinking about going to a tournament in an international style that will host mostly American debaters and American judges. How ironic to think the country with the most varied and most access to competitive debate at many levels of schooling would have thought so little as to the connection of debate training to creating good arguers.

This brings me to my first point about this tournament. I hope this tournament doesn’t reveal an Americanization of world’s debating. I’m not sure what that looks like, but I think it would have something to do with prioritizing the distribution of information, facts, background and evidence to the judge over the art of persuading the judge that the points of advocacy being raised are correct in that round. There should not be an American style of BP, only BP.

Currently NPDA is in crisis. Their listserv lights up from time to time with reflection, disappointment and conversation that perhaps the technical or “transmission” elements of their format are trumping the intent of why NPDA was formed in the first place. CEDA/NDT continues to host semi-regular development conferences in hopes of trying to infuse their format with public and rhetorical relevance. I hope those who practice BP in the US take a lesson here and don’t want to end up in that position. We should be having these conversations now, at the beginning, but the speed sort of takes over, and the excitement of watching something grow so fast and provide so much rhetorical stimulation sort of kills the exigence for such a conversation.

We should take some moments to reflect on what we are doing, why we are doing it, and what we would like this to look like in 10 years. We have a nice litmus in the international debating community. Practices that don’t work there shouldn’t work here. And the technical transmission of correct information shouldn’t trump the art of integrating information with reasons and general appeal. Of course, every format aims for the latter, it’s just a question of not fooling yourself that your small group is some sort of general audience. This is our biggest threat.

Denver of course has personal appeal to me as well as I write about this – it’s the city where, in On the Road Sal Paradise recognizes he is alone at a party because he is becoming a part of a strange, new ‘beat generation.’ Denver was the center of the US in Kerouac’s mind, since he did see the US as a combination of both coasts, transitioning from one to the other as you move West (as he thought everyone should). He also felt due to the altitude it was a point from which to symbolically survey all of America. Denver always had mystical appeal for Kerouac and the Beats, and now it serves as a reflexive point for me at least, looking back on the last 3 years of trying to teach the BP format, or as it was referred to many times in the CEDA East region – “The Experiment.” I hope to have many good conversations, see many good debates, and of course enjoy the whole experience. I wonder what mystical experience awaits, probably nothing, but I also wonder what strange, new generation I am involved in here at this waypoint in the development of US BP debating.

Closed Adjudication and the Ballance of Learning


Things are ramping up toward the white party tonight and the grand final round of WUDC 2010. Great tournament and great people.

Been thinking a bit about the final closed rounds. Closed adjudication is something we rarely, if ever do in the Northeast BP region of the United States. I have usually been against it, only supporting it as a cultural norm from IONA, or the global BP community tradition.

Closed adjudication seems to be a terrible overvaluing of the competitive elements of debate over the pedagogical. Its function seems to be to keep debaters puzzled and hanging on to hope while their chances to learn something from their judges quickly bleed away as the time at the tournaament diminishes into socials and other important things.

This is my standard view of closed adjudication, but here at Koc Worlds I have been presented with some of the reasons for it, and I find them convincing.

First, closed adjudication ensures that teams don’t give up and leave. Here we are in a great, exotic locale, why bother debating on if there’s no chance to clear? Many teams would simply withdraw from the tab and be running around the city. Seems a bit far fetched to me, but I think that there would be some teams who might just decide to hang out at the bar once it was statistically impossible for them to break. The tournament certainly cannot provide enough swing teams to cover all of these possibilities.

An additional concern is that some teams might be bitter about their non-breaking status and deliberately ruin the debates that they are in. This of course destroys the chances of the teams left in the rooms to break and hurts their ability to enjoy the challenge of the round.

Finally, there is the element of surprise, where they want to make sure that the teams are very excited and thrilled to know that they broke. The emotional tension and excitement should be high on break night and everyone should be screaming and jumping around.

These are the most convincing arguments I’ve heard for it, and I agree partially. I think that these reasons are important, however, they are all in the service of “sportifying” debate instead of keeping debate on the educational and critical keel that is important long term.

I know that many people don’t particularly care to get feedback from closed rounds. It’s hard when the chairs have little to no memory of the round by the time the break is released, and additionally when the moment of decision is hours old. This is of course if you can find the people judging you at the party and talk to them coherently due to the noise or other things.

These rounds are closed because they are important: They are the rounds that can decide the break and are some of the closest rounds held at any tournament. This is also a reason they should be open: They are close adjudications, and the teams involved could learn a lot from the feedback they could get about their performance in a tight room.

I don’t think closed adjudication is going away anytime soon but here are a couple of fixes that should be implimented so the educational elements are not trumped by these competitive elements.

First idea: chairs should have to provide written decisions that then could be emailed and kept by the tab. These decisions then could be downloaded on demand or emailed to the teams involved in the round. Not suggesting this as a DCA job, but more of a chair job perhaps. The decision and comments should be written out with the chairs present.

Second idea: With the cheapness of digital video, the decision should be filmed and recorded immediately after the round by a runner or some other tournament official. These can then be saved and accessed via internet after the break. This preserves the immediacy and freshness of the comments and allows teams to relax a bit and not have to chase down the judges before they forget or leave the tournament.

Final Idea: A room set aside that is quiet and comfortable for those judges and debaters who want to discuss the closed rooms during the party. I doubt many would use it, but the option would be available for those who wanted to get feedback right after the break.

I think these are nice ways of preserving closed adjudication for its minor benefits of creating excitement and its major benefit of preserving interest for teams that would actively or passively ruin the debating experience for teams that still care about doing their best. The current system sits too far over on the side of sport and not enough on the side of learning.

Rejecting the “Righteous Four”

Doing some last-minute preparation before our departure for New Haven in the morning for the Yale IV, which generally involves printing out maps, train schedules, hotel confirmation numbers and tax exemption forms. Prepping for a tournament is pretty easy after doing so many so close together – one of the things about adjusting to BP style is the run-up to the big tournament happens in the fall, since Worlds is held over the Winter intercession. This means spring is lighter in feeling, even though the U.S. Nationals is an important tournament. But it’s not the same as the October-December blast of tournaments. In policy debate, the run-up ends either in February/March, when the regional qualifiers for the NDT are held, or CEDA nationals, or perhaps both depending on your preferences and your orientation to and within debate.
One big difference was pretty clearly pointed out to me in a couple of conversations I had surrounding the Hart House tournament at The University of Toronto. This was a fabulous tournament, but a few American debaters started a conversation about how wrong it was that they might have been forced into taking positions they found morally offensive. They were ok with losing though because their arguments were “right.” I call this idea the “theory of the righteous four.”
This theory postulates that it’s not only fine, but morally acceptable to get ranked a four in a debate where you, by virtue of your position on the table, had to say or engage in argumentation that you find morally or ethically objectionable from your own political views. If you (rightly) refuse to engage, you will get ranked four. But that’s ok, because you are on the side of justice, rightness, virtue, and many other noble truths in life.
When I first came to coach in the Northeastern U.S. in 2001, I first encountered this idea. I found it baffling – a bizarre at best, unhealthy at worst conflation of speech in debate and personal politics. The best description I mustered to myself at the time was that it was a simple logical fallacy – substitution of effect for cause – that made people think, “because she’s saying this she must believe it.” But surely, only the most rank amateur would believe such a post hoc. But there were a number of students around the circuit that would say to me during the criticism, “Don’t you dare indict my voice.” The conflation of debate with personal advocacy I found then to be confusing and dangerous, and I believe the same thing now.
First, it’s a fallacy – probably a good idea to reject “effect for cause” reasoning. But the more critical claim at work here is the political function of a debate tournament. If you believe that debate is important because it is one of the last places where every idea can be treated on its merits with fair, critical evaluation then you have to accept, I think, that occasionally you will have to inhabit ideas that are not your own. These ideas are not always better ideas than your own; they can easily be ideas that you have had, or that you entertained and rejected on ethical or moral grounding. But either way, you should still embody them again, and in a manner that is not a straw dog, but a serious, strategic attempt at defending the idea.
The reason why is in service to debate as a whole. Good ideas glimmer more when the light of their alternative is present. Better, more persuasive accounts of thoughtful ideas can be crafted if someone smart is taking the other, more insidious side. Everyone benefits if a fair, persuasive attempt to represent all appropriate (read: kairotic) arguments are attempted in the debate. Relevancy and attention to nuance must be considered as well. In the end, the benefits of debate are extended when the debate is handled for the sake of debate, and not individual personal politics.
Here is what happens under the “righteous four” model – all of the discourse in debate shifts to the left. Instead of developing insights into argumentation that has a large representation in the public, the discourse becomes about “out-lefting” one another. If nobody will inhabit the “reprehensible” ground, then no chance appears for understanding why an argument we believe to be a priori “evil” would ever find assent. I would also suggest that those who refuse to take up objectionable positions within debates ensure a future of assent to those same reprehensible positions – they intellectually disarm all participants in the round from valuable defensive practice against such ideas. Just because you don’t prefer a certain weapon doesn’t mean that you should forgo training in how to defend yourself from that weapon.
A great example of this is the recent Hart House IV final round – This house would not contact undiscovered human populations. After a fairly good proposition case was established, the Opening Opposition speaker stood up and did something incredible – the first words out of her mouth were, “Madam Speaker, we kinda like exploitation.” Brilliant. Is it because it’s offensive? Because it’s rejected by modern conceptions of the good, liberal politics and the like? Is it because it advocates violence and mayhem and that’s cool? Not any of these. It’s because it is an argument that is both relevant and contains the potential for great intellectual investigation within the context of this debate.
The debate was framed around the idea that contact, historically, leads to exploitation. I think it is intellectually responsible in the service of debate to offer the idea that exploitation is a situational term. Politically, this loaded language can do a number on an audience. It is up to the skilled debater to give it the nuance and articulation it needs to become a believable point. Is it really exploitative in all cases? Is the connection definitely solid? And in which instances would we prefer “exploitation” over the alternative of no contact whatsoever? These are the major clash points that arise from entertaining an idea that many, especially those in the academy fields of anthropology, sociology and others would find to be a repugnant position. Everything hinges on the definition, and the nuance of the speaker in establishing that definition and its limit.
Unfortunately, the speaker backed off of pursuing this line of reasoning possibly due to the laughter and reaction of the audience. But it’s a shame she did. I think they could have won with a careful analysis of what this means, instead of the fear of a neo-liberal “bad word” can generate. “You said a dirty word” is not that persuasive a reason to reject someone, unless you are a High School teacher.
In certain debate communities, such as NPDA and American Policy debate, you can find regions where people do occupy ground where, if the audience is unskilled in the basics of debate practice, their personal view might be mistaken for their advocacy. I think we in the BP community want to provide the same excellent tradition of switch-side argumentation that these other communities have provided. Avoiding the sentimentally nice idea that “I lost because I refuse to compromise my principles” is a very important step in the service to much larger principles of intellectual rigor, argumentative development, and persuasive realism – all of which serve the members of the community in their development not as political radicals, but something much better: Moderates who critically examine public discourse and are not afraid to entertain the idea that they might not know it all, they might need more information, and more time might be needed to figure out what’s best – all of which work very well in the service of pluralistic democracy.