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Argumentation. Argument is movement. move an audienceadvance positionssway opponentsredirect questioningfollow lines of argumenttake logical leapsretreat from claimspush issuesdrive points homecome to conclusionsarrive at a decision. Points of Stasis. Predictable places at which arguments pauseA point of clash between competing arguments.Useful to evaluate opposing arguments.
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1. Adjudicating BP Debates Steve Johnson
University of Alaska
3. Argument is movement move an audience
advance positions
sway opponents
redirect questioning
follow lines of argument
take logical leaps
retreat from claims
push issues
drive points home
come to conclusions
arrive at a decision
4. Points of Stasis Predictable places at which arguments pause
A point of clash between competing arguments.
Useful to evaluate opposing arguments
5. Points of Stasis 2 Types:
PROPOSITIONS: The general point in the debate at which the Proposition’s arguments clash with the Opposition’s
ISSUES: The specific points within the proposition over which the Prop and the Opp disagree
6. Propositions PROPOSITIONS: The general point in the debate at which the Proposition’s arguments clash with the Oppositions
Propositions identify the relevant territory for the debate (and exclude the irrelevant territory)
Propositions divide the Prop territory from the Opp territory
7. The Proposition
8. Propositions
“China should ban smoking”
Proposition: China should ban smoking
Opposition: China should not ban smoking
9. Dragon Appropriate?
West
Misunderstood?
Historical Meaning?
Practical costs?
10. Issues ISSUES: The specific points within the proposition over which the Prop and the Opp disagree
Issues focus the points of clash within the proposition
Emerge as a result of the arguments advanced by the Prop and Opp sides
May or may not be acknowledged by the teams
12. Issues “China should ban smoking”
Proposition:
Smoking creates a significant public health hazard
Opposition:
Banning smoking will have significant economic consequences for producers and retailers
Banning smoking infringes on the rights of smokers.
14. Debating (argumentation) is a contest of efforts to gain ground on particular issues and, by so doing, on the proposition.
Ground may be gained by advancing (horizontally) against opponents or by expanding (vertically) against other issues.
15.
Distribution: Horizontal movement within issues
The contest between arguments made (construction) and arguments engaged (deconstruction)
17.
Distribution: Horizontal movement within issues
The contest between arguments made (construction) and arguments engaged (deconstruction)
Prop: Smoking poses a public health risk
Opp: Smoking poses little public health risk
19.
Expansion: vertical movement between issues
Comparing and contesting the relative importance of issues (framing).
21.
Expansion: vertical movement between issues
Comparing and contesting the relative importance of issues (framing).
Prop: Smokers’ rights are less important than public health
Opp: The economic consequences of this policy far outweigh the minimal gains in public health, particularly when less intrusive means to control smoking exist.
23. The Process of Adjudication
24. Priorities and Guiding Values Tabula Rasa: the “blank slate”
Education: participants should be encouraged to improve and develop
Non-intervention: let the debaters debate, don’t make their efforts irrelevant or do their jobs for them
25. 3 standards and a model The Standards:
Matter and Manner
Role Fulfillment
Better Debate
The Model:
The movement model
26. Matter & Manner Matter
3.1.1 Matter is the content of the speech. It is the arguments a debater uses to further his or her case and persuade the audience.
3.1.2 Matter includes arguments and reasoning, examples, case studies, facts and any other material that attempts to further the case.
3.1.3 Matter includes positive (or substantive) material and rebuttal (arguments specifically aimed to refute the arguments of the opposing team(s)). Matter includes Points of Information.
Manner
4.1.1 Manner is the presentation of the speech. It is the style and structure a member uses to further his or her case and persuade the audience.
4.1.2 Manner is comprised of many separate elements. Primarily, manner may be assessed by examining the speakers’ style (delivery) and structure (organization).
27. Role Fulfillment Opening Prop
Clear Model and Case
Refutation and Rebuttal
Opening Opp
Clear team line
Refutation and Rebuttal
Member Speakers (Closing Prop & Opp)
Extensions
Whip Speakers (Closing Prop & Opp)
Holistic Summary
28. The “Better Debate” Standard Who contributed most to (or detracted most from) the quality of this debate?
Guiding principles:
Inquiry: Are the most germane issues interrogated?
Advancement: Does each speech/speaker move the debate forward?
Engagement: Do the debaters test the arguments of the opposing side?
Performance: Who delivers the most compelling oratorical effort?
29. A model of adjudication Model: A perspective from which to consider the debate
A framework to guide your consideration of the round
Debate is a contest of ideas:
the best ideas should win
30. Less Practical Adjudication Models “Truth of motion” model
Question: at the end of the debate, is the motion true or false?
Risk: the bias of the judge may make the debaters’ efforts irrelevant “Skill of debaters” model
Question: which team did the better job of arguing their position?
Risk: the debaters may be eloquent, but their arguments may be untrue.
31. The Movement Model
Before the round, the judge thought the motion was:
After the round, the judge thought the motion was:
Opposition wins, because they moved the judge the farthest.
32. Adjudicating the Debate Identify the proposition
Identify the issues
Determine the winner of each issues
Determine the importance of each issue
Assess each team’s efforts relative to the issues
Report the decision
33. Steps 1 & 2 Identify the Proposition: What is the question of the motion?
Identify the Issues: Over which specific points do the teams contest the proposition?
35. Steps 3 & 4 Determine the winner of each issue: Which side occupies the most ground for each issue? (Distribution)
Determine the relative importance of issues: What is the relative importance of each issue? (Expansion)
36. Truth: does the argument correspond to fact or reality?
Fidelity (External Consistency)?
Coherence (Internal Consistency)?
Validity: is the argument well-constructed and well-executed?
Effective expression?
Strategically deployed?
38. Step 5
Determine each team’s effort relative to each issue: Who did what to win or rank each issue?
40. Step 6
Justify and report the decision
41. Oral Adjudication Constraints
Between 10-20 minutes
Delivered by the Chair
Wing adjudicators may contribute at the Chair’s discretion
Should not reveal speaker points
Procedure
Reveal Rankings
Provide Reason for Rank for each team
Provide constructive criticism
Answer questions
42. Panel Adjudication Achieving consensus
Many perspectives can make for better judging
Led to consensus by the Chair
Avoid bullying
Avoid laissez-faire leadership
Active participation by Wing Judges
Critical to quality decisions and adjudicator development
Don’t capitulate; don’t calcify
Isolate the difficult decision
Bench win?
Top or bottom half debate?
Agree on First? Fourth?
Decision between 1st & 2nd? 2nd & 3rd?
Can default to majority decision
43. Assigning Points
Scale
1-100; 75 average
Point inflation strongly opposed
Functional range: 60 - 90
Determining Points
Points are based on consensus
Start with agreement on highest or lowest for best or worst speaker
Individual points totaled for team points
No low-point wins