Great Communicator Debates NAUDL Online Qualifier

2018 — Chicago, IL/US

Judges

All judges must have a Tabroom account. To create an account, click "Sign Up" in the top right corner of the screen.  

Each team must provide 1 judge for each 2 competitors entered.  The local league may pool volunteer judges to cover this team entry requirement.  Judges must be at least 18 years old and have been out of high school for two years to be eligible to judge, meaning the person should have graduated in June 2015 or earlier. NO HIRED JUDGING IS PROVIDED

Sample ballot can be found here: https://www.reaganfoundation.org/media/129899/great-communicator-debate-ballot-2017.pdf

Judge Training Video can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4nlGuYILQ4

The Great Communicator Debate is an individual event that advocates or rejects a position posed by the resolution. A central tenet of the debate is that the clash of ideas must be communicated in a manner persuasive to the non-specialist or “citizen judge,” i.e. a member of the American Jury.

A Great Communicator Debate should:

  • Display solid logic, reasoning, and analysis
  • Utilize evidence but not be driven by it
  • Present a clash of ideas
  • Counter the arguments of the opponents (rebuttal)
  • Communicate ideas with clarity, organization, eloquence and civility

In making a decision, a judge should be as objective as possible. Judges should adjudicate the round as it is debated, not as they personally feel.  Judges should not disclose their preferences.

  1. Procedure and Order/Time Limits of Speeches:
    • The Affirmative should sit on the judge’s left hand side with the Negative sitting on the judge’s right.
    • The Affirmative will always speak first. During the Crossfire, the Affirmative will ask the first question.
    • Each side receives 2 minutes of prep time which can be used at any point during the When one side asks to use their prep time, the opposing side may also use the time.

 AFFIRMATIVE

5 minutes

Opening Statement

NEGATIVE

5 minutes

Opening Statement

AFFIRMATIVE

4 minutes

Rebuttal

NEGATIVE

4 minutes

Rebuttal

CROSSFIRE

3 minutes

 

MODERATOR

3 minutes

Pose questions to each side*

AFFIRMATIVE

3 minutes

Closing

NEGATIVE

3 minutes

Closing

TOTAL DEBATE TIME

30 minutes

 

FEEDBACK & COMMENTS

4 minutes

 

PREP TIME

2 minutes

 

*Like a presidential debate, the moderator will at this point have an opportunity to pose a question to each debater. In general, this should be to clarify or help the competitor expand on a point from earlier.

        2. Timing: Timekeepers are optional, but not Debaters may time for themselves and for their opponent.

        3. Plans/Counterplans: Similar to Public Forum Debate, a plan or counterplan is a formalized, comprehensive proposal. Neither the pro nor the con side is permitted to offer a plan or counterplan.

       4. Closing: No new arguments may be introduced in the Closing; however, debaters may include new evidence to support prior arguments.

      5. Speaker Points: The scoring scale will be based on 100 points. The winner of the debate MUST receive the higher speaking score and debaters may not receive the same score. When scoring, please consider the debater’s performance on the following:

Overarching Big Picture – Civility – Use of Compelling Evidence

Storytelling – Strategic Responses to Opponent & Moderator – Passion & Strength

 Scoring Scale

100

Perfect (A+)

70-79

Average (C)

90 – 99

Outstanding (A)

60-69

Below Average (D)

80 – 89

Above Average (B)

59 or lower

Unethical/ Inappropriate Behavior

        6. Filling out the Ballot: When you come to the end of your ballot, you will be asked to give answers to the following questions for each debater.

    • Reason for my decision (cite specific arguments that had a bearing).
    • Describe 1-2 areas where the debater excelled.
    • Describe 1-2 areas where the debate needs improvement.
    • General comments to the debater.