This Blog has now moved to idebate.org/worlddebating - all future posts will be made there!

10 February 2012

2012 HWS / IDEA Round Robin Automatic Bid Teams

The following 9 teams have confirmed that they will be attending the 2012 RR based on their accomplishments in 2011.

Cambridge (Maria English & Tom Powell)
International Mace Champion
Cornell (Alex Bores & Ryan Yeh)
Hart House IV Champions
Hart House (Veenu Goswami & Josh Stark)
Canadian BP Champions
Oxford (Ben Woolgar & Will Jones)
Euros Champion
Pretoria (Katherine Harding & Debby Nixon)
Pan-African Champions
RVCE (Prasun Bhaiya & Karthik Sivaram)
Asian BP Champions
Stanford (Michael Baer & Shengwu Li)
Worlds Finalist & Yale IV Champion *
Sydney (Dominic Bowes & Paul Karp)
Australian BP Champion
Sydney (Joanna Connolly & Daniel Swain)
Oxford IV Champion & Worlds Finalist *

* Denotes a double-qualifying team

The teams filling the remaining 7 at-large spots will be announced shortly.

8 February 2012

Kent IV 2012


Dear Debaters,

This year the University of Kent will be hosting our first IV on Saturday March 31st on our Canterbury campus.
BP style debating with four rounds, a semi and a final!
Open to all standards of debaters!
A fab social after the final!
Definitely some free food!
Cheap registration fee! Only £20 if paid in advance or £25 on the day!  Details of advance payment will be sent soon!
 
CA Team to be announced...
and
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN
Register here ^ - if you have any issues, all you need to do is get in touch!
 
Our building fully caters to those with additional needs so just drop me an e-mail if you have any and your debating rooms will be assigned accordingly :)

contact:
debates@kentdebating.co.uk
if you have any questions!

--
Monifa Walters-Thompson
Debate Convenor
Kent Debating Society

"Kent's Best New Society 2010"
www.kentdebating.co.uk

Finalists in the 2012 Irish Times

After 4 months of debating the Irish Times Finalists have now been announced.

Teams:
1st Prop - TCD Hist - Ian Curren & Adam Noonan
1st Opp - TCD Phil Ruth Keating & Rebecca Keating
2nd Prop - RCSI Eoin Kelleher & Elizabeth Ahern-Flynn
2nd Opp - UCD L&H Mark Haughton & Christine Simpson

Individuals:
1st Prop - UCD Med Soc Michael Conroy
1st Opp - TCD Hist - Liam Brophy
2nd Prop - UCD L&H Hannah Lucey
2nd Opp - TCD Hist Rian Derrig

The grand Final will be held on Friday the 17th of February in the Royal College of Surgeons. The motion for the final will be This house would Abolish Prisons.  The guest chair will be Minister for Enterprise, Jobs and innovation Richard Bruton TD.

7 February 2012

Sciences Po Le Havre IV 2012: 13-14 April!

Sciences Po IV is back and MUCH BIGGER and BETTER!
Sciences Po Paris (Le Havre Campus) presents the Fourth Sciences Po IV, promising you two days of great debates and great fun AND a BRILLIANT CA team!

CA Team:

Jack Watson
- CA for Bristol IV 2011, CA for Warwick IV 2011, CA for Imperial Open 2011, Quarter-finalist of WUDC 2012, Semi-finalist of WUDC 2011, Finalist EUDC 2010, Best Speaker and Winner of Cambridge IV 2011, Winner of TCD IV 2011, Finalist SOAS IV 2010, Finalist Durham IV 2010, Best Speaker of York IV 2010, Best Speaker of Warwick IV 2010, Best Speaker of Manchester IV 2010, Second Best Speaker of EUDC 2011

Isabelle Fischer (Loewe)
- DCA for Berlin WUDC 2013, CA for Edinburgh Cup, ESL Champion, EUDC 2006, Panel Judge for Finals of EUDC 2011, ESL Semifinalist of WUDC 2007, DCA Tallinn Euros 2008, Breaking Judge at WUDC 2009 and 2010

Niall Sherry
- Winner Irish Times Debating Competition 2010, HWS Round Robin 2010, Winner Kingsmill-Moore Invitational 2011, Finalist UCD IV 2010, Maynooth Open 2011, Semi-Finalist Galway Open 2011,DCU Open 2011, Cambridge IV 2009

Anne Valkering
- Winner of WUDC ESL 2008, finalist of EUDC 2006, CA of SciencesPo IV 2009 and 2010, CA UCU Open 2011, Convenor of Amsterdam EUDC 2010, DCA Dutch Nationals 2009, Convener EUDC 2010, CA Bonaparte Debate Tournament 2007, DCA Amsterdam Open 2008 and 2009

About the IV:
• 7 minute speeches
• 5 preliminary rounds
• Separate ESL breaks to semis
• Open breaks to semis
• All meals provided
• Wine and Cheese!
• Two socials
• Yakka!

Registration:
The registration fee is 25 euros/person (two teams per university ONLY)
Cap - 48 teams, so secure your spot NOW before they are filled!

Adjudicator: n-1 rule applies. Fees does not apply.
Crash is guaranteed for both, Debaters and Adjudicators.

*Please Register at the following link:
Registration will be open till 15th March.

*Pre-payment is required to guarantee a spot. Please send your receipt after the bank transfer to scpoiv@gmail.com.
Refer to our website for more details.


Schedule:
Friday 13th April 2012

12:00 – 14:00 Registration and briefing
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch
14:15 – 16:15 Debate: Round 1
16:15 – 16:30 Break
16:30 – 18:30 Round 2
18:30 – 18:45 Break
18:45 – 20:45 Round 3
21:00 – 22:00 Dinner
23:00: Social

Saturday 14th April 2012

10:00 – 12:00 Round 4
12:00 – 13:00 Lunch
13:00 – 15:00 Round 5
15:00 – 15:15 Break
15:30 – 17:30 Semi-Finals
17:30 – 18:00 Snacks
18:00 – 20:00 Final
22:30 – 23:00 Awards, dinner and closing ceremony
23:30: Social


How to get to Le Havre:

Train: When you reach Paris, travel to Gare St. Lazare and take the train to Le Havre (a 2-hours ride).

Ferry: Take a ferry from Portsmouth to Le Havre (8 hours)

Please let us know when you arrive at the station or the port, so we can pick you up!


For more information, please refer to :www.sciencespoiv2012.webs.com
Contact us at: scpoiv@gmail.com

Call for Trainers : 1st IDEA Asia Youth Forum : 11th to 27th May 2012 : Thailand‏

Greetings everyone,

I'm sharing this message on behalf of IDEA (International Debate Education
Association).

IDEA is proud to announce the first ever Asia Youth Forum. Modeled after
the IDEA Youth Forum (now in its 18th year) the Asia Youth Forum aims to
bring together the most enthusiastic students and teachers, to learn debate
skills and content around a specific theme. We are looking to build a team
of regional trainers for this event, and if you are interested, please
apply! The format used will be Karl Popper but capable trainers from other
formats are encouraged to apply.

The details of the forum

- Theme : Crossing Borders : Migration in Asia
- Dates : 11th to 27th of May 2012
- Location : Bangkok, Thailand
- Trainer Application Deadline : 21st February 2012
- Target audience : High school students from all over Asia
- Trainer application process, criteria, expectations and benefits are
detailed in the Call for Trainers and Application form (attached with this
email and available on http://www.idebate.org/asiayouthforum)

We realize that the dates do clash with the UADC tournament. Unfortunately
these dates were the most optimum for the high school debaters and
educators that form the core of the Asia Youth Forum. We realize that some
people who may be interested in training at the Youth Forum may wish to
also attend the UADC and for this reason we are doing our best to
accommodate those schedules by making necessary allowances. If you need to
leave earlier to attend the UADC, indicate so on the Trainer Application
form.

For questions or comments, email cnasuwan@idebate.org or loganimal@gmail.com.
More details are also available on our website at
http://www.idebate.org/asiayouthforum

The registration process for teams will open soon and you'll be getting
another message when that happens =]

Cheers
Logan
Curriculum Director
IDEA Asia Youth Forum

6 February 2012

2012 Madison Cup Debates Invite‏

On behalf of the James Madison Center, and JMU Debate we are pleased and excited to invite you to compete for the Madison Cup at the 12th annual “James Madison Commemorative Debate and Citizens Forum” on Thursday, April 12th, 2012.

The James Madison Commemorative Debate and Citizens Forum is a unique inter-collegiate debate competition, which combines the excitement and challenge of tournament competition with the relevance and empowerment of a public audience and audience participation.  

We are pleased to continue our partnership with The Arthur N. Rupe Foundation. The funding provided by the Rupe Foundation allows us to provide prize money to the top ten teams, the top twelve debaters and three teams qualifying for travel stipends.

2012 Topic: This House stands resolved that: The United States has an obligation to support emerging democracies in the Middle East and Northern Africa

Other cool and unique features:
                *$30,000.00 in prize money
                *Debating and competing in front of public audiences
                *No entry fees
                *Continental breakfast, snacks and lunch provided
                *Video web-cast of the final round
                *Great PR for your debate program

The tournament details are enclosed with this letter.  If you should have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

We look forward to hosting you in April!

Mike Davis, Ph. D.                                                                            Pete Bsumek, Ph.D.
Co-Director, Madison Cup Debates                                          Co-Director, Madison Cup Debates
School of Comm. Studies                                                              School of Comm. Studies
James Madison University                                                           James Madison University
(O) 540-568-7308                                                                              (O) 540-568-3386
(E-mail) davismk@jmu.edu                                                         (E-mail) bsumekpk@jmu.edu

Background: The James Madison Center at James Madison University sponsors the event in the spirit of James Madison's ideal that a republican democracy is healthy only when informed and civil debate thrives. The final round will be broadcast on the World Wide Web.  Last year’s debate featured teams from American University, City University of New York, Claremont Colleges, Cornell University, George Mason University, James Madison University, Liberty University, Piedmont College, Southeastern College, Towson University, University of Alaska, University of Mary Washington, University of Richmond, University of Vermont, Virginia Commonwealth University, Wake Forest University, and Yale University.

The Arthur N. Rupe Foundation has agreed to serve as the sponsor for the 2012 Madison Cup and we are humbled by their continued commitment to furthering public debate. They have agreed to maintain team and student awards from last year, as well increasing travel stipends to a total of $10,000 for teams that qualify through the application process outlined below.

We are hopeful that this will be the strongest field that we have had so please enter early.

Eligible Participants:  Each school may enter one two-person team.  The debate is open to undergraduate students who are in good standing at their respective institutions.  Second teams will be considered on a case-by-case basis, if space permits. 

Competition Format:  The debate uses a “long table” format.  This is a public debate.   Last year there was an audience of around 500 people for the final round, preliminary rounds were smaller (audiences of 20-30 people).   The “long table” format features three (two person) teams on each side of the question.  Speeches start with the affirmative and alternate between the affirmative and negative throughout the debate.  Teams are randomly assigned to sides and speaker positions.  In other words, if a team is selected to be the first affirmative, they will give the first two affirmative speeches in the debate.  The first and last speeches on each side of the question are uninterruptible.  Any member of the opposing team may interrupt the speeches in the middle of the debate in order to ask the speaker to yield to a question.  Speakers are not required to answer these questions (although not answering questions may cause the audience to think that the speaker is “dodgy”).  Please see the example format below for more information.  You can view the 2010 final round at: http://www.jmu.edu/debate/madisoncup/2010.shtml

Jury Adjudication Procedure:  A three to seven member panel, or jury, will adjudicate the debate.  Juries will be comprised of local residents, students, professors, distinguished JMU alumni, and special invited guests.  At the completion of the debate, the panel will adjourn to discuss, deliberate and decide upon the winners as a group.  The jury votes for (2-person) teams, not sides of the question.  In other words, first place could go to an affirmative team, while second place could be awarded to a negative team. 

Tournament Procedures:
*Number of rounds: This year we will offer three preliminary rounds of debate and one final round.
*Switch side debate: Each team will debate at least once on the affirmative and once on the negative. 
*Side & position:  Sides (affirmative or negative), and positions (first affirmative team, first negative team, second affirmative team, etc) for the preliminary debates will be determined by random drawing.
*Judging: Judges will rank teams 1-6 in each preliminary debate, and assign each team quality points based on a one hundred point scale (1-100).
*Advancing to the final round: The six teams with the lowest total ranks will advance to the final round.  Quality points will be used to break ties.
*Sides and Speaking Positions in the final round:  Sides and speaking positions in the final round will be based on seeding after the preliminary rounds.  For example, the first seeded team will choose their “side and position,” then the second seed will choose “side and position,” and so on.

Public Participation:  While the jury deliberates, the floor will be opened for audience comments and speeches.  An award for the best floor speech will be presented.  Local newspapers, politicians, and the general public are invited.

Awards:  The first place team will leave with the Madison Cup—a very nice traveling trophy. Once again this year there is a $15,000.00 purse of prize money.  All participants in the final round will be recognized with awards.
                                Prize money will be awarded as follows:
                                1st place: $5000.00 donation to your debate program
                                2nd place: $3000.00 donation to your debate program
                                3rd place: $2000.00 donation to your debate program
                                4th—6th place: $1000.00 donation to your debate program
                                7th-10th place: $500.00 donation to your debate program

Any student who participates in the final round will receive a prize to be distributed in the form of a scholarship. The top team will receive $2,000 per student and the remaining students in the final round will receive $1,000. This is a doubling of student prize money from last year.

Entry:  There are no entry fees. We can accommodate a field of 36 teams.  Entry is on a first come, first serve basis.  The first 18 teams to enter are guaranteed a spot in the field, after that we will accept teams, if we can generate a field divisible by 4 or 6.  Deadline for entry is March 15th.  This is necessary so we can determine how many debates there will be in each round.  Send school info, team info (first and last names of debaters) and requests for additional teams to:  Dr. Mike Davis, davismk@jmu.edu

Travel Stipend: This year we are pleased to offer a travel stipend of $2,000 to three teams that are able to demonstrate that they would add significantly to the quality and diversity of teams participating in this year’s competition. In addition to these stipends we are also able to offer and additional $4,000 in smaller stipends to schools that are on the East Coast or would only require partial assistance. To complete your application for travel stipends please visit: http://jmu.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_3ZUZCKc3WFPUype

Your application should be submitted by March 1st. We will use the following criteria when deciding which teams are awarded the stipend:

·         Quality of Team- What is the team’s competitive success? Do they have prior public debate experience?

·         Diversity- How does the team add to the diversity of the event? Things such as regional, institution, debate format will all be considered.

·         Budget – What level of funding does your administration provide? How many students does that budget currently serve? Would the team be able to attend the competition otherwise?

·         Previous Competitor – Is your school new to the competition? Will participation in this event/receiving the stipend assist in future development of your debate program?

 Lodging: We have reserved a block of hotel rooms at two area hotels. Both rates will be available until March 18th.

 The Best Western Inn.  The phone number for the Best Western is 540-433-6089.  The rate for 1-4 people per room is $56.00 + tax.  When calling the Best Western Inn please mention that you are attending the Madison Cup debates at JMU.
The Comfort Inn. The phone number for The Comfort Inn is (540) 433-6066. The rate is 1-4 people per room is $79 + tax. When calling please mention that you are attending the Madison Cup debates at JMU.

 Travel:  James Madison University is located in Harrisonburg, VA, which is two hours southwest of Washington, D.C. on I-81.  If you plan to fly consider Dullas and Washington National/Reagan Airports in Washington DC (2 hours away), Richmond airport (2 hours away), Charlottesville airport (one hour away) and the Shenandoah Regional Airport (15 minutes away).  We will arrange transport from Shenandoah and Charlottesville, we’ll do our best to work with you from the others.

Schedule:
Thursday, April 12th, 2012:  James Madison Commemorative Debate and Citizens Forum
8:00 AM: Pick up at the Best Western or Warsaw Street Parking Deck
8:00AM-9:00AM  registration and Announcements
9:30 AM: Preliminary debate round 1
11:00 AM Preliminary debate round 2
1:00 PM Lunch
2:00PM: Preliminary debate round 3 (announcement of the final round participants)
5:00 PM: Final round (followed by the presentation of the Madison Cup)

Example Debate Format: The 2004 final round proceeded as follows.

1st Affirmative Speech (Wake Forest #1): (4 minutes) uninterrupted

 1st Negative Speech (George Mason #1): (4 minutes) uninterrupted

 2nd Affirmative Speech (Wake Forest  #2): (5 minutes):  The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 2nd Negative Speech (George Mason #2): (5 minutes): The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 3rd Affirmative Speech (Georgetown # 1): (5 minutes): The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 3rd Negative Speech (James Madison #1): (5 minutes): The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 4th Affirmative Speech (Georgetown #2): (5 minutes) The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 4th Negative Speech (James Madison #2): (5 minutes) The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 5th Affirmative Speech (Mary Washington #1):  (5 minutes) The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 5th Negative Speech (Towson #1): The first and last minute of the speech are uninterruptible.  In the 2nd-4th minutes of the speech any opposition debater may ask the speaker to yield to a question.  The speaker may accept, or decline the question.

 6th Affirmative Speech (Mary Washington #2):  (4 minutes) Uninterrupted

 6th Negative Speech (Towson University #2):  (4 minutes) Uninterrupted



Michael Davis
Assistant Professor/Director of Debate
James Madison University