National Speech and Debate Tournament

2023 — Phoenix/Mesa, AZ/US

Ariel Gabay Paradigm

Lincoln Douglas
Lincoln Douglas Debate Judge Philosophy

Your experience with LD Debate (check all that apply)

Former Policy debater
Collegiate Policy debater

How many years have you judged LD debate?

2

How many LD rounds have you judged this year?

0-10

What is your preferred rate of delivery?

9/91 = Slow conversational style
9 = Rapid conversation speed
 

Does the rate of delivery weigh heavily in your decision?

N
 

Will you vote against a student solely for exceeding your preferred speed?

N

How important is the criterion in making your decision?

It may be a factor depending on its use in the round
 

Do you feel that a value and criterion are required elements of a case?

N

Rebuttals and Crystallization

 

Voting issues should be given:

Either is acceptable
 

The use of jargon or technical language ("extend", "cross-apply", "turn", etc.) during rebuttals:

Is acceptable
 

Final rebuttals should include:

Both
 

Voting issues are:

Not necessary

How do you decide the winner of the round?

I decide who is the person who persuaded me more of their position

How necessary do you feel the use of evidence (both analytical and empirical) is in the round?

9/91 = Not necessary
9 = Always necessary

Please describe your personal note-taking during the round

I keep a rigorous flow
Additional remarks: The core tenet of my philosophy as a judge is I try and be as firmly technical as possible. technical concessions matter a lot. this is broader than just the argument, but the way I am told to evaluate it. I will try and minimize intervention, in any regard, to as close to zero as possible, obviously, in some debates it is inevitable, and if that's the case, I'll let the debaters know, why and where, but will try and optimize intervention towards what I believe is most fair.

Note: if you wish for your pronouns to appear the debaters you judge on text/email blasts, log into Tabroom, click Profile at top, and add them in the Pronouns field.