1 / 18

CSE3PE: Professional Environment

CSE3PE: Professional Environment. The Debate. The Debate. A debate is “a polite verbal battle” It may be used by an individual to reach a decision or by an individual or group seeking to secure a decision from others

felcia
Download Presentation

CSE3PE: Professional Environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CSE3PE: Professional Environment The Debate

  2. The Debate • A debate is “a polite verbal battle” • It may be used by an individual to reach a decision or by an individual or group seeking to secure a decision from others • Success or failure in life is largely determined by an ability to make wise decisions for ourselves and to secure the decisions we want from others Professional Environment

  3. History of the Debate • The debate has been used as an instrument for dealing with the problems of society since Aristotle and Plato Professional Environment

  4. Forms of Debate • Debating teams • Parliament • Formal meetings Professional Environment

  5. Benefits of Debating • Provides preparation for effective participation in a free society • Offers preparation for leadership • Offers opportunity for investigation and intensive analysis of significant contemporary problems Professional Environment

  6. Benefits of Debating (cont.) • develops proficiency in critical thinking • develops knowledge and purposeful enquiry • develops an ability to make prompt analytical responses • develops critical listening • develops proficiency in writing • is an integrator of knowledge Professional Environment

  7. Debating – How? • Phrasing the debate proposition • A. Controversy • B. One central idea • C. Neutral terms • Significant contemporary problem • Equal conflicting evidence and reasoning • Single declarative sentence • Avoidance of ambiguity Professional Environment

  8. What’s wrong with these proposition examples? • There are inadequate parking facilities on campus • Should our university abandon intervarsity sport? • University entrance requirements should be stricter • The federal income tax rate should be limited to a maximum of 25% and labour unions should be subject to antitrust laws Professional Environment

  9. Debating – How? • The Sides • Affirmative presents the proposition, defines the terms (must make the interpretation clear) and states the issues • Negative can either accept the definition or offer superior ones, accept the statement of issues, revise the issues or offer additional ones Professional Environment

  10. Debating – How? • Analysing the problem • Defining the terms • Identifying issues – claims with answers that directly prove or disprove the opposition • Identifying contentions – need several to support an issue Professional Environment

  11. Debating – How? • Exploring the problem • Sources of material • Questions to ask • Who is concerned with the proposition? • Who is interested in securing the adoption of the proposition? • Who is interested in preventing the adoption of the proposition? Professional Environment

  12. Debating – How? • Organise your material • Evidence • facts, opinions and objects that are used to generate proof. • Credible evidence • sufficient evidence • clear evidence • authenticate, confirm & substantiate • statistically sound evidence Professional Environment

  13. Debating – How? Professional Environment

  14. Debating – How? Professional Environment

  15. Debating – How? • Obstacles to clear thinking • unsupported assertion • are sufficient examples given? • ambiguity • loaded language • Attacking and refutation • are opposition’s arguments relevant? • don’t say “this is illogical” or “ridiculous” Professional Environment

  16. Debating – How? • Manner (Presentation) • How argument is presented is as important as what is said • Aim is to appear comfortable, convinced that the case you are presenting is the only possible view of a rational person and that you are letting the audience share your knowledge • Natural, sincere, persuasive • Notes should fit in the palm of your hand - A SPEECH READ OUT IS NOT A DEBATING SPEECH • Don’t use “I think” when trying to prove a proposition • Presumptuous to state publicly that your opinion is proof! Professional Environment

  17. Singles Debate • Assessment • Matter • Manner • Method Professional Environment

  18. References • Critical Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts (2009) • http://www.insightassessment.com/pdf_files/what&why2007.pdf • Freeley, A. (1986) Argumentation and Debate: Critical Thinking for Reasoned Decision Making, 6th Ed., Belmont, California: Wadsworth. Professional Environment

More Related