What Is Debate?: Opening Government: Opening Opposition
What Is Debate?: Opening Government: Opening Opposition
What Is Debate?: Opening Government: Opening Opposition
• Debating is a clash of arguments. For every issue, there are always different sides of a
• To make those reasons understandable and convincing, debaters should deliver their
• Since competitive debating aims to convince judges that a team’s argument is superior, it
gives opportunities to use analytical-critical thinking and public speaking skill to the fullest, skills
• The point of having a debate is to speak out and listen to different kinds of opinions
Debating Format
1. There are 4 teams debating, each consists of 2 debaters who would be 1st and 2nd speaker.
2. Two teams shall be the Government/Affirmative side the side agreeing with motion, the other 2
teams shall be the Opposition/Negative side the side disagreeing with the motion.
3. Each speaker will deliver a substantial speech of 5 minutes duration, with the affirmative going
first. Here is the scheme:
4. In a substantive speech, members of the opposing team are allowed to give interruption, called
Point of Information (POI), to the speaker delivering the speech. POIs may be delivered between
5. A time keeper shall signal the time. There will be one knock at the 1 st and 4th minute, to signal time
for POI. And two nocks at the 5 th minute to signal that delivery time for the speech almost ends
and that is the time to sum up or to give conclusion. After 5 minutes and 20 seconds, time keeper
will knock continuously to show that the time has been up.
6. Any debater speaking before 5 minutes 20 seconds shall be considered undertime and his/her
points could be reduced. Any debater speaking after 5 minutes 20 seconds shall be considered
overtime and his/her points could be reduced as well. Be good in your time management.
7. Every debate shall be judged an odd number of judges and only the judges shall decide who wins
8. Every team is given 15 minutes preparation time after the motion is released and before the
debate begin. During this preparation time, teams are not allowed to get help from anybody.
Motion
Motion is current issue that emerges from all aspects in our life. Each motion will not be weighted more to
affirmative or opposition. Basically it is neutral and debatable. Below are some motions for you to debate:
- That free trade is a way forward
- This house would not allow local government to pay for the relocation of homeless people
Definition
A definition is how you understand the motion. It scopes down or gives limitations on the motion to
focus the debate. It clarifies the motion. The right to give a definition belongs to the
Government/Affirmative team. The affirmative team must provide a reasonable definition for the motion.
This means:
1. On receiving the motion, both teams should ask: “What is the issue that the two teams are
expected to debate? What would an ordinary intelligent person thinks the motion about?
2. If the motion poses a clear issue for debate (i.e. it has an obvious meaning), the Proposition must
define the motion accordingly. When the motion has an obvious meaning (one which the ordinary
intelligent person would realise), any other definition would not be reasonable.
3. The negative team may challenge the Proposition’s definition, arguing it is unreasonable. The
Opposition will have to explain exactly why it is unreasonable, then put up an alternative (and
reasonable) definition, before proceeding to advance arguments and examples based on its own
definition. It will meanwhile ignore the arguments and examples the Proposition has put forward
a. Truisms
A truism is something that is obviously true. It would be a truism to define the motion
‘This House believes that the sun is rising in the East’ literally. The Opposition would have
nothing to say to three speeches that discussed the manner in which the earth revolved
around the sun. In terms of the questions posed above, the Opposition should be asking
whether there is a clear issue to be debated. There is no issue as to whether the sun
b. Tautologies
argument and leaves the Opposition nothing to debate. In this case, the Opposition first
speaker pointed out that the definition was tautological, and her team won the debate
unanimously. Another example of a tautology would be defining the word ‘best’ in the
motion ‘This House believes that government is best when it governs least’ to mean ‘least
intrusive into the lives of ordinary people’. Truistic and tautological definitions are clearly
c. Squirreling
Squirreling happens when a definition is not tied down to the spirit of the motion and
doesn’t have a proper logical link to the motion. For example: for the motion ”That USA is
opening up to the PRC” the affirmative team defined USA as “Untidy Student of Asia” and
PRC as “Pretty Room Cleaners” this is definitely squirreling as anyone would agree that the
spirit of the motion is about the relationship between United States and China.
Time setting happens when the debate is confined to a particular time in the past or
the future. Place setting unfairly happens when the debate is confined to particular place
where an ordinary intelligent person in the scope of the tournament wouldn’t know about
CONSTRUCTING CASES
The definition settled, each team has to present a case, arguments and examples. Each team presents a
single case. The team’s case is supported by several arguments. Each argument is backed up by one or
more examples.
(a) Case
The team’s case is sometimes called the team line or team theme. This is the essence of what the team is
arguing. Every individual argument made must help prove the case, which in turn must prove the team’s
side of the motion. During preparation, the team should always try to work out the key point it wants to
make. Does this prove its side of the motion? Does each individual argument derive from this?
(b) Arguments
The team will need to ensure that it provides arguments in support of its case and that these arguments
are divided among the three speakers, the most important arguments being made first.
An argument is a reason or rationale why the team’s case is right. Inexperienced debaters sometimes
state the team case, but then descend into a series of examples, without trying to show how they are
linked or the underlying reasons why they prove the team’s point.
Examples alone can never win a debate. There will always be examples for and against the motion. The
strength of the arguments that seek to explain the examples will therefore be more important.
(c) Examples
Arguments require logic and reason, and need to be supported by examples. Without proof, arguments are
reduced to assertions and generalisations. The best examples are those that the ordinary intelligent
person (hopefully most audience members!) will have heard of. When presenting an example, it is important
that it be fully explained. It is better to mention a few examples well, linking them carefully to arguments
just made, and explaining why they are relevant and significant to the debate, than merely to list a series
2. Giving the oral adjudication ( announce decision, provide reasons for decision and offer advice to
debaters).
o Matter and Manner contribution of each team should be discussed (along with Points of
Information- as in the quality of the questions and the responses to them, which possesses
o Oral adjudication is presented by the chair of the panel, or a member of the majority, if
o Announce the rankings before explaining the verdict (encouraged), if not the explanation
o Explain to the debaters, why the panel/majority decided the team ranking in that order, so
debaters can understand how the adjudicators distinguished the teams in terms of
o Provide constructive advice (drawn collectively from the panel) for the debaters.
Ranking teams
Mark
Meaning
s
Excellent to flawless.
The standard you would expect to see from a team at the Semi Final / Grand Final
74-75
level of the tournament. The team has much strength and few, if any,
weaknesses.
Average.
72
The team has strengths and weaknesses in roughly equal proportions.
Very poor.
70
The team has fundamental weaknesses and few, if any, strengths.
Individual members’ marks:
Mark
Meaning
s
Excellent to flawless.
The standard of speech you would expect to see from a speaker at the Semi
74-75
Final / Grand Final level of the tournament. This speaker has much strength and
few, if any, weaknesses.
Average. The speaker has strengths and weaknesses and roughly equal
72
proportions.
71 Poor to below average. The team has clear problems and some minor strength.
70 Very poor. This speaker has fundamental weaknesses and few, if any, strengths.
Adjudication Sheet
Motion : _______________________________________________________________________