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Training, 19/10/2011. How to tackle a motion. What commonly occurs. Motion is announced. Team think up arguments for his side of the debate. Team provide said arguments.
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Training, 19/10/2011 How to tackle a motion
What commonly occurs. • Motion is announced. • Team think up arguments for his side of the debate. • Team provide said arguments. • Feedback is given; Team is told that their arguments were very well made but that another team better fulfilled the burdens of the debate.
What to do • Consider what the debate is meant to be about. What’s the ‘problem’ that you’re going to argue about? • Decide what needs to be proven in order for your side to carry the motion. • Write these burdens down (usually 2 or 3). • Think up arguments which meet these burdens.
Motion: THW require all schools to teach safe sex to children from age 10 regardless of parental consent. Government: • Children are old enough to learn about safe-sex at age 10. • It is necessary that children know about safe-sex from age 10. • The state has the authority to overrule the wishes of parents on this issue (or are better placed to) Opposition: • Children are too young to know about safe-sex at age 10. • It is unnecessary to teach them about it at age 10 because it is irrelevant to their lives. • Parents have the authority to decide if they do/do not want their children taught about this issue at age 10 because it is controversial and is not urgent (due to 1. and 2.)
THW bring back corporal punishment. Government: • It is legitimate to hit children. • It is legitimate for teachers to hit children. • Corporal punishment would lead to a (large) improvement in teaching/learning conditions.
Opposition Burdens • It is illegitimate to hit children, regardless of any possible benefit. • This possible benefit does not exist anyway because corporal punishment brings more harms than benefits – i.e. worsens teaching/learning conditions.
THW Pay Smokers to Quit Smoking Government • Smoking has a large negative impact on society as a whole. • It is legitimate/fair to pay smokers to quit smoking. • It will lead to a reduction in smoking.
Stakeholder Analysis • If you’re trying to think of something new or different, engage in stakeholder analysis • A stakeholder is someone who has an interest in something, in debateland, it’s a person (and other like them) who are affected by a motion • You should always do this, consider who a motion affects? • How exactly does it affect them? • What special rights do those people have? • Why should we care about what happens to them?
Stakeholders method • Who are the groups affected by this? Do we have an argument about all the important groups? • “Groups” can refer to types of people, organisations, systems (i.e. Government, the environment etc) and many other things • Example Motion: “That we should ban junk food in schools”
Stakeholders Method • Who are the relevant stakeholders in this motion about banning junk food in schools? • Schools • Students • Parents • Junk food companies • Health system • Government • General populace
Concentric Circles Method • Concentric circles are circles which lie within each other • Thinking about debates as smaller and bigger circles can help find key arguments • Example motion: That the US should intervene in Syria
That we would support the US intervening in Syria Smallest circle: Syria Wider circle: Iran, Israel, Jordan, the US Wider circle: The whole middle East Wider circle: Europe Widest circle: The world • Note: These techniques will not give you all the most important arguments in a debate, but are useful tools • For example, this debate may also want to talk about whether the use of nuclear weapons is moral