SF Roosevelt Sweetstakes
2016 — SD/US
Varsity Public Forum Paradigm List
All Paradigms: Show HideMy background- While in high school, I competed in varsity public forum all four years. I'm well versed in the format and how things are supposed to run. I have been judging since I graduated, which was in 2015, so I have stayed up to date on formats, styles, etc. If you have any more questions about this just ask.
Speaking- Delivery is important. If you are fumbling through your case and your arguments and seem unfamiliar with what you're saying, that doesn't look good to me. I do fine with speed, but I still need to be able to understand what you're saying. If you are going to be going through your speeches rather quickly, be sure that your tags are made clear so I'm flowing things where you're intending for them to be flowed.
Argumentation- I am a flow judge so I prefer you break your arguments into points that can be tagged and followed with ease. This applies to all of your speeches. If you leave things untouched on the flow, I consider that dropping the point. When it comes to crossfires, be civil. Don't belittle each other, and respect what your opponent has to say regardless of how much you disagree. You can be passionate, but don't be rude. The summary and final focus SHOULD NOT cover the entire flow. By this time you need to have the round broken down into a few main arguments for me to vote on, and they should be consistent throughout both speeches. You need to tell me why these are the most important arguments of the round and why you've won on them (weighing arguments/evidence). Telling me you attacked your opponent's point is not enough, tell me why your attack is valid and defeats their point. Frameworks are fine, but if both teams are running one and they contradict each other you need to tell me WHY to prefer yours.
Evidence- Your claims need to be evidence backed. With that, you need to represent your evidence as it was intended, which requires you to have an understanding of it before using it in the round. Misrepresentation is absolutely not okay, and if your opponents call you on that I expect you to clarify/defend what you said about it previously, and I have no issue with looking at the evidence myself. With this, there should be a clear link between your evidence and the argument at hand. You shouldn't be trying to make connections that aren't there just so that you have something to say against a point.
Timing- I will keep time for all speeches, crossfires, and prep time. You are more than welcome to keep your own time as well and are encouraged to do so. I prefer that you don't time your opponents because if your timer goes off before mine/theirs it is disruptive and in my opinion rude. If you feel you must time them as well, please do it silently. If you are asking for evidence, I will run prep time while you're looking through it. While you are using prep time, I am paying attention. I will stop prep when I see that you have stopped working, not when you tell me to stop.
I am 100% open to answering any questions you have at the beginning regarding my paradigm, and at the end regarding the round (time allowing). I will disclose if that's what the tournament has asked for me to do, but otherwise, I typically keep my vote to myself. All of my feedback is meant to be constructive and to help you improve, not to tear you down!
Make sure you are speaking clearly and enunciating. Moderate speed is fine as long as your speech is clear. Be respectful of everyone in the round.
Specify the voter issues; main arguments in today's debate, why you won, why they lost, and why your impact outweighs theirs. I use your voters and the flow to choose a winner.
LD
I am in my third season of judging LD, so I am still learning. I will admit that I am leaning on my Public Forum experience to a degree during the learning process. I have so far developed two rules about judging LD:
1.) Defend your value statement, especially if your opponent attacks it. If your opponent is able to negate your value statement, your case goes away and it becomes extremely difficult to win at that point.
2.) If you and your opponent agree upon or merge your value statements and your criterion, then to me it becomes a PF round.
PUBLIC FORUM - READ TO THE END FOR AN UPDATE ON THE NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2021 TOPIC.
Introduction
The best thing about Public Forum Debate is that anyone can judge it, and the worst thing about Public Forum Debate is that anyone can judge it. If you don't read this before a round, ESPECIALLY IN THESE DAYS OF ONLINE DEBATE, don't complain to your coach about what is said on my ballot after you lose.
How I vote/Framework
You can present your framework if you want, but I really don't pay any attention to it, especially with resolutions that are Yes/No. I am more interested in hearing the contents of your case, and I don't start flowing until I hear you say "Contention 1". I vote based on the cases, their contents, the attacks made on the cases and the responses to those attacks. Whoever has the majority of their case left standing at the end of the round wins. I value evidence over opinion, but not exclusively so. If you are presenting a morality-based case, you do so at your peril. It is my opinion that morality arguments are best done in LD. If you present a morality-based case AND you tell me I'm immoral if I vote you down, you are officially done at that point (it's happened, that's why it's included).
Argumentation
First and foremost, I expect professional conduct during the entirety of the round. While I haven’t yet decided a round based on arrogance, rudeness or condescension, I also have no qualms awarding a low-point win if the tournament rules allow.
Case speakers – I would like to think that I have a pretty good idea of what has to be proven by whom during a debate round, especially toward the end of a topic period. Therefore, I don’t want to hear the Webster definition of 3 or 4 of the words in the resolution unless your definition differs from your opponent's. You may present framework if you want, but refer to the above as to how I treat it. As stated above in "How I vote", I very rarely start flowing until I hear "Our first contention is...…"
Rebuttal speakers – I value your responses to your opponent’s case more than I do getting back to your own, especially if all you’re doing is re-reading it. In addition, PLEASE TELL ME IF YOU ARE ATTACKING YOUR OPPONENT'S CASE OR ARE SUPPLEMENTING YOUR OWN WITH WHAT YOU ARE PRESENTING. If you don't, it doesn't get flowed, and what doesn't get flowed doesn't get judged. I also like rebuttal speakers who are skilled enough to be able to attack their opponent’s rebuttal if you are speaking second. Finally, be very careful if you're attacking your opponent's case with points from your own. If your attack point gets damaged or negated, the opponents points you attacked will more than likely pull through intact.
Crossfire – It is very difficult to win a round during crossfire, but it is very easy to lose a round during crossfire. I’ll let you interpret that however you want. I consider CX to be for my benefit, not yours. I'm not real crazy about interruptions or talking over one another. Let your opponent finish an answer before you ask a follow-up question. I do reserve the right (and I have done it) to cut off a CX round if all you're doing is continuing the debate rather than doing Q&A. My rule at the buzzer - an answer may finish, a question may not.
Summary - The third minute of summary that was added last year has been interesting in how teams have approached it. I will say this: If you are speaking first, you can go back and attack your opponent's rebuttal, but don't spend more than 90-seconds on it. If you spend the entire time in attack, I'm going to assume you think you're losing. You should be introducing voters and giving me your introductory analysis of how the round is going.
Final Focus – You should be telling me why you won the round. I do not object if you figuratively take me by the hand and walk me through your analysis of how the round went. If you spend more than half your time continuing to attack your opponent's case, I will again assume that you're not confident about the success of your own.
Delivery
As far as speed goes, this is not policy. While I do flow with a spreadsheet on a laptop, there are even speeds that I can’t follow. If you see me put my hands behind my head, you are talking too fast, and what does not get flowed does not get judged. Please slow down a notch when presenting main points and sub points.
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2021 TOPIC - If you are going to run Climate Change on the Pro, or Remittances on the Con, you had better be able to connect it back to the resolution. If you don't, and your opponent argues that either of these points are non-resolutional, I will agree with them.
Questions? Feel free to send an email to either wilsonbl@sio.midco.net or blaine@ucctcm.org