National Speech and Debate Tournament

2023 — Phoenix/Mesa, AZ/US

Leonid Rubchinsky Paradigm

Policy
Policy Debate Judge Philosophy

Your experience with Policy Debate (check all that apply)

Frequently judge Policy Debate

How many Policy rounds have you judged this year?

11-20

Which best describes your approach to judging Policy Debate?

Policymaker
 

RATE OF DELIVERY

1/91 = slow and deliberate
9 = very rapid
 

QUANTITY OF ARGUMENTS

1/91 = a few well-developed arguments
9 = the more arguments the better
 

COMMUNICATION AND ISSUES

5/91 = communication skills most important
9 = resolving substantive issues most important
 

TOPICALITY: I am willing to vote on topicality:

4/91 = often
9 = rarely
 

COUNTERPLANS

7/91 = acceptable
9 = unacceptable
 

GENERIC DISADVANTAGES

2/91 = acceptable
9 = unacceptable
 

CONDITIONAL NEGATIVE POSITIONS

8/91 = acceptable
9 = unacceptable
 

DEBATE THEORY ARGUMENTS

8/91 = acceptable
9 = unacceptable
 

CRITIQUE (KRITIK) ARGUMENTS

8/91 = acceptable
9 = unacceptable
Additional remarks: I am a lay judge, who has been judging debate for a few years. I value the ability to emphasize and develop the most important ideas and to convey them in a clear and convincing manner. I value quality and clarity over quantity, and I have a somewhat negative attitude towards spreading and very technical approaches (unless they are executed in a clear-to-understand manner and emphasize and prioritize important arguments). I believe one of the roles of a judge (besides providing constructive feedback to debaters) is to listen to debaters in order to develop a nuanced understanding of the issue at stake to decide whether aff or neg side is more convincing.

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.