Middle School Debate Topics
Middle School Debate Topics
Middle School Debate Topics
by Melissa Kelly
Updated October 12, 2017
Debates are a wonderful, high-interest way to teach a number of skills to students. They
provide students with the ability to research a topic, work as a team, practice public
speaking skills, and use critical thinking skills. Holding debates in middle school
classes can be especially rewarding despite the challenges that go along with teaching
tweens. These students enjoy debating as it provides variety and allows them to become
passionately involved with an assigned topic.
1. All parents should be required to attend parenting classes before having a child.
2. All students should be required to learn a foreign language in middle school.
3. All museums should be free to the public.
4. Single-sex schools are better for education.
5. Students should be held legally responsible for bullying in schools.
Want to get your child’s brain working? Debating is a great way to do it. We share some challenging
questions to trigger their thought processes.
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Some children seem to have opinions about anything, and don’t hesitate to share them. Others are more
reticent, and have to be persuaded to share their viewpoints.
But whichever camp your child falls into, debating can have many benefits, including improving their
communication and listening skills, building confidence and self-esteem and broadening their
horizons.
We asked Ian Gilbert, author of The Compleat Thunks Book (Independent Thinking Press), to share some
brilliant, thought-provoking debate topics (or, as he calls them, ‘Thunks’) that kids will love getting their
heads around.
Children have an innate sense of what is right and wrong, but it can be very binary.
Their world is full of goodies and baddies through stories and films, but life is more complex than that.
This topic allows them a peek into another world where good and bad still exist but the lines are not quite
so clear.
This Thunk encourages them to explore to what extent dogs – a proxy for all animals, in many ways –
have feelings beyond simple ones such as pleasure.
It also throws up the question of whether dogs and other animals have minds at all.
This topic also throws up the notion of robot consciousness and ‘rights,’ especially in a world where
we’ve just seen the first robot gain national citizenship, in Saudi Arabia.
The connection between toys and children runs deep, but these days, we can end up thinking that a toy is
something that is made by someone else, and made to be a toy.
Children love discussing toy questions, and this one raises issues around ownership as well as purpose
and design and the nature of play.
Follow-up questions for those who answer ‘yes’ might include, ‘Can air be a toy?’ or ‘Can another human
be a toy?’
The ideas of consciousness, what it is to be human and what it is to be alive can be discussed here.
A good topic for older children, this might trigger other controversial issues to do with women’s rights.
Important issues can be explored in a non-moralistic and safe way.
The concept of bravery can be almost stereotypical with children: boys are brave and they protect girls.
TV and books are full of this view, but maybe the ‘scared girl’ is doing the right things, and the ‘big brave
male’ is making things worse.
This question comes from my own family’s personal experience, and still vexes us!
Again, the binary nature of children’s thinking can be challenged here. Are things either bad or good?
Can things be neither? Can something be both good and bad, and how does that work?
Issues of ownership are important to children. So what is ownership – is it a right? Is it ‘God given’ or do
you earn it? At what age do children stop being ‘owned’, if at all?
If parents own their children, can they legitimately sell them? And can a father ‘give away’ his daughter?
Encouraging them to think about their thinking means we open them up to the idea of ‘metacognition,’
which has been shown to be helpful for academic success and wellbeing.
Where do thoughts come from? Where do they go? Can you count thoughts and, if you can’t, is it because
you humanly can’t count them (like stars) or because they’re uncountable (like water)?
It’s said that children don’t see colour, so is it the sight of difference that provokes feelings of distrust and
dislike?
Is racism something that is inherent, or is it taught, and if so, by whom and why?
Can you be accidentally racist, and if so, should job interviews and political debates be held ‘blind,’ rather
like the judging system they use in The Voice, so we’re not influenced by skin colour?
11. Were you loved less when your young brother or sister came along?
This is bound to cause a heated discussion, even if your children are all grown up!
Of course, all parents will deny this, so a follow-up question might be, ‘where does the extra love come
from?’
This also raises questions about the nature of love. Is it something you feel, or something you do? Is it
something you give, or something you receive? And do you love different things not only in different
ways but with different sorts of love (like the Greeks attested)?
12. If you put a mirror next to a candle in a dark room, do you now have twice as much
light?
A topic that encourages children to look around them and think deeply about the natural world.
Whereas some Thunks explore abstract concepts, they can also be used to open our eyes to the world
around us; a world that we can easily take for granted unless we ask questions like this.
Other similar Thunks include, ‘Does the light come out upside down if I turn my torch upside down?’ and
‘Does the music come out upside down if I turn my speaker upside down?’
SPEECH AND DEBATE TOPICS FOR
KIDS
NOVEMBER 18, 2013 KIDSWORLDFUN 17 COMMENTS
Before choosing the topic it is important to take into account the occasion of the speech as well
as the age and ability of your kid. If there is an event or a specific celebration in school, the
speech topic you select should be related to the significance of that specific event. If your kid is
going to participate for a speech competition, you should provide a set of topics to choose from.
Start speech with good and relevant short stories. Use appropriate quotes to make the speech
more attractive. In such cases, choose the right topic based on the occasion and the type of
listeners you have.
Here are some interesting speech topic ideas for your kids:
When it comes to choose a debate topic, children need to research on various topics and practice
well for their public speaking. From casual school debates and in extremely competitive debates,
children have to follow a debate format. Here are some interesting debate topics which you can
choose for your kid’s next school competition: