Debate Surge in NYC


myself, Neill Harvey-Smith, Beth Connor, and Loke Wing Fatt, all in my apartment.

After US nationals we have had a surge of debate activity here at the University – first Loke Wing Fatt joined us from Singapore and immediately got into teaching with some short suggestions to the students for how to improve their techniques as well as a full critique of a practice debate held on the handgun motion from the national final round in Vermont.

After that Neill and Beth arrived and graciously offered to conduct a workshop before they returned home after a long series of engagements in the US – CAing and DCAing the US nats, judging at the Hobart & William Smith Round Robin, and doing a few days of workshops at Colgate University upstate. They did drills and answered questions for nearly 3 hours to a group of students from St. John’s, The King’s College and Adelphi.

It was great having them here and I must admit this morning I’ve been a bit unanchored and remiss to return to my normal daily life of reading, writing, grading and teaching.

I got a lot of great advice from Loke. He has really keen insight into debate, and especially how to structure a successful program. I hope to impliment his ideas soon. Neill and Beth were great for bouncing ideas off of, and chatting about the explosive advance of WUDC style debating in the United States. I think we had some very constructive and interesting conversations and I am certain that WUDC debating in the US will continue to grow. My concern is uncontrolled random growth without much direction. Preparing for a WUDC touranment is different than other formats – and the perception is that prep in one format might be more than enough for prep in another format. This bad perception can lead to dissapoinment at the first touranment and rejection of the format. It’s up to those who are familiar with the format to make sure that new programs get the support and guidance they need. And no, a morning briefing the day of the tournament will not be enough.

So I am very grateful to my new international debate coach friends. And I hope to see them again soon. Who would have thought only a few years ago that there was this international community of debate educators so willing to spend their valuable time helping out others who are just getting started?

New School Tantrum

Protests today at the New School are just another example of the rising frustration of students with the tale of “go to University, get a nice job” that for some bizarre reason all elements of the University have fallen behind in perfect step.

This tale is starting to lose interest among our students, as it is no longer satisfactory to repeat the same story. Even now the infantile demand for repetition – “No, you’re telling it wrong! Tell it how you did last time!” is transforming into “That story is for kids, tell me a new one!” And the tantrum begins when we don’t have a good story.

We have excellent people in our Universities, perhaps it is just that they forgot they were telling a tale of opportunity to get students interested in the relevance of the Academy? At some point the tale should have been exposed, like other childhood myths. Like the bad Disney movie, we wish our stories would come true and when they did for a while, it was a bit horrific, but we got used to it. Now the power is waning, and we need a new story to tell.

Perhaps the New School students are not as infantile as I make them out to be. All the tales of what they did during the occupation today make me cringe with a sense of revolutionary paternalism – “Where on earth is the vanguard?” I said while reading it. Anyway, one of them made it to the roof and began to read On the Poverty of Student Life over a megaphone. Pretty hilarious, as it’s somewhat self-degrading.

It’s been a while, since my Marcuse obsession of 2004, that I have read this document, and today I was inspired to read it again. Thank you New School tantrum. I think I’m starting to find an alternative bedtime story for my increasingly frustrated University students. Perhaps your intent wasn’t to fuel what we professors do, but perhaps through some of these elements I can actually be persuasive to your peers in ways that your Made for TV movie 60’s style protests cannot.

Also – am I the only one who thinks that when a building is occupied, you should let people from the other side in to debate you? If you win the debate, you leave the building. Judges can be decided from the crowd outside.

An American WUDC organization

At USU Nationals there was a bit of discussion about creating a national organization for American universities that do the WUDC format. I have been thinking about this idea for a while and have a pretty good defense as to why it might be a good idea to create one.

The arguments against it are of the general category “organizations bad” – they are bloated, political, don’t do a lot except for self promotion, and generally create strife among the members. Although I can’t say I haven’t experienced this in organizations I’ve been a part of, I also think that a U.S. WUDC organization could avoid these pitfalls. Here’s how I see it going down.

1. Separate the organization from any rankings or competitive elements. This seems counter intuitive to most people. Of course the organization should do national rankings! Of course it should have a national championship! But I think those statements are counter intuitive. Why must a national organization sanction a national tournament or a sweepstakes? Why not let those be different organizations, different set-ups and different groups administering them? The problem of folding everyone into a national tournament system or a sweepstakes system is that it narrows the possibilities for the programs involved to define themselves and define success their way to their administration. Also if an individual or a group decides to act in an inappropriate manner, schools very far removed from that behavior have to defend their entire existence – as what we saw in CEDA this past fall.

Instead, why not let the organization assist in the administration and sponsorship of such things. This breaks the organization’s tunnel-vision when it is linked to a tournament. Direct link to a national tournament puts the vision on awards, winning and all of the drama around bids and hosting the tournament. Rules for who can and can’t participate consume most of the organization’s time. This is not what we want. Let that happen outside of the organization.

2. the organization’s mission should be pedagogical and developmental. The primary drive of a US national WUDC organization should be to share and develop best practices of the teaching of argumentation and debate, both within the format and using the format as a springboard for general debate and argumentation education. The organization facilitates access, distribution, and development of teaching resources for all members. The organization hosts conferences where teaching practices are demonstrated and round tables are hosted on pedagogical issues. A mentorship system is established between debate directors who have mastery of the art with those who are just developing that mastery.

On the developmental front, the organization should conduct outreach to universities and colleges that do not currently participate in WUDC to show them the benefits of participation. There should be a “rapid response” team within the organization that can respond to inquiries for help in building programs quickly, professionally and without attitude. There should be an easy to download or access curriculum guide for instructors to seamlessly fold WUDC style debating into argumentation classes at the college or university level. There should be some funds set aside to help offset travel costs for newer programs to attend their first tournament and debate in WUDC format.

3. Sponsorships and Funding. Instead of a membership fee, member institutions pay their way through service – voluntary at tournaments or for the organization’s larger goals in development and pedagogy. Sacrificing part of one’s conference travel budget to teach a workshop or conduct judge training would be a good example. The voluntary board of directors of the organization will work to secure national sponsorships, funding and endowment monies from national level corporations, individuals and institutions. These moneys will be used to subsidize tournaments in the US in the WUDC style as well as defer travel costs for schools on a basis of merit and need. The goal of this arm of the organization is to make sure the financial playing field stays level at all times, and ensures a balance of participating schools. Unlike some other formats, we do not want financial inequity to become part of our argumentative language-game, nor do we want to brush off the recalcitrance of fiscal reality by claiming it can be solved by allowing for more open argumentative performances. I think the organization should recognize fiscal realities and limits as the most important obstacle debate programs face.

4. National Judge Certification. The organization should create a system of judge training and certification at the national level. Much like medical boards and bar associations, our organization should be self regulating, encouraging open debate and discussion on what qualifies a chair, and what a good judge should look like. Within this scholarly-style discussion, a process of examination should be developed involving a blind peer-review process conducted by a training board who will be selected based on merit and community respect. The materials and tests should be freely available, and certification should last for a few years. The test should be marked by at least two individuals from geographically different parts of the US, and the test should involve using real in-round videos which are becoming more and more easily accessible in the age of cheap digital video.

The certification process should be linked to tournament sanctioning, sponsorship and assistance. It should be assumed that those involved in the organization will sit for the test frequently and no exceptions to testing will be extended to be considered a qualified judge. At sponsored and assisted tournaments the use of qualified adjudicators as chairs must be a requirement.

So that’s all I can think of for now, but I think it’s a lot to do.

Of course an easy answer to all of this is to say “IDEA does it.” Unfortunately, that organization is spread pretty thin. Why not have something that focuses on our unique problems, needs and desires? It doesn’t compete with IDEA, since they are interested mostly in high school debating anyway.

this organization as I envision it would be great. Of course in practice things have a tendency to bloat and become lazy. I hope those who would be interested in a vision as I’ve laid it out here would not allow this to happen. But I think the members would be the best check on each other as long as they remained honest, and remembered that in the end we all want the same thing – successful students.

Half Baked

Everything I am working on posting right now is half baked, so I can’t really post but I sort of want to.

I had a fantastic time at USU Nationals in Vermont, but my video camera was being disobedient, so I have no video to show for it. However, Tuna recorded some excellent rounds and there were a few professional videos during the tournament, so I encourage you to check them out at the Debate Video Blog.

Here are the things I’m working on posting about: What a defense of a national organziation for US BP/Worlds coaches looks like, Why the CA/DCA system might not be for the United States (thinking about adding a :A Geneology but that makes me sound a bit snooty), and perhaps something about the recent Ward Churchill stuff which has me thinking about the limits of academic freedom.

So in other news, Loke Wing Fatt was here for the past couple of days and he gave me great advice about how to advance my program. He has very keen perspectives on debate, debate pedagogy, and structure – three things that I love but might not be the best in the world at doing.

Monday we have a workshop, and it’s pretty much all arranged. I’m exctied to see how that goes as it will be the first function that all three of our allied schools in the area might attend.

Zero Hour Approaches

Well this is the last full (fool) day before departure to the USU Nationals. I’m not really doing a lot related to the direct preparation of students today. Instead, I’m following April Fools day on the net.

I’m also becoming a huge fan of Oceanlab. How can every track you cut be better than the last one? Unreal. My life unfolds to this soundtrack these days.

So tomorrow it’s off to Burlington. Here are some thoughts about the upcoming tournament:

  • I hope to pick up some new ideas about teaching debate and the role of debate in the University from my colleagues. I like sharing ideas, especially about how to defend large debate programs from the impending changes in the University that are most likely coming as the economic situation continues to decline.
  • I expect to see some very good debates.  I have a few teams I’m looking forward to judging, and I hope I’m in those rooms.
  • I’m looking forward to re-connecting with the students, judges and coaches in the region, catching up and seeing what they are thinking about.
  • I’m really looking forward to meeting up with a couple of good friends from overseas – that is going to be one of the highlights of the trip I think.
  • Looking forward to seeing how the CA/DCA system works from the inside.
  • Hoping to not forget to take a lot of pictures and/or videos.
  • And I wonder if I will have the time to hit all of my favorite Burlington places?  I’m going to try really, really hard.

And I’m not sure how my students will do. They are taking it very seriously, which can be good and bad. One should take it as it is. Which would be as the mirror does. Mirror-mind – one of the more difficult concepts to understand which appears in a few Eastern traditions of thought, including Zen Buddhism and Taoism.  I haven’t begun to figure out how to teach it yet.

Well it is time for me to go meet with my freshman and see how they are doing. Then off for a few errands before tomorrow’s trip. I’m excited! This time last year I think BP was very different.  I will be curious to see the differences in how I felt about the debates I saw in Portland and the debates I will see in Vermont.