NSDA Middle School Nationals
2018
—
Fort Lauderdale,
FL/US
Individual Events Paradigm List
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*Siarah *Armstrong
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Madeline *Belshaw
Hire
None
*Colton *Blanton
Hire
None
*Connor *Bloom
Hire
8 rounds
Last changed on
Thu June 21, 2018 at 4:46 AM EDT
-I qualified to state in Modern Oratory in 8th grade. This year (12th grade) I qualified to nationals in Big Questions Debate.
-I like speeches that have a unique perspective over speeches with passion. Passion is still super important, but I love speeches or interp that presents a new look.
*Robert *Boyce
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Christian *Cantu
Hire
None
*Alex *Chun
Hire
8 rounds
None
Last changed on
Fri March 15, 2024 at 5:18 AM PDT
she/her/hers
tl;dr - be nice, signpost, pls no kritiks. I was a pufo debater and it shows :')
Judging preferences - Summary
Always signpost. pls. always. signpost. Always.
Your number 1 job is to debate the topic. I want to hear about the topic. I like arguments about the topic, SIGNIFICANTLY MORE than arguments about the rules and how your opponent is messing up the debate because their arguments "don't hold according to CHSSA or NSDA rules..." I've found that in past years, everyone says that their opponent's case "don't hold." Keep the debate educational, I know enough about the rules by now.
My favorite kind of debate is a slightly fast, intellectual Public Forum/LD debate. If I can't understand you due to speed or lack of pronunciation, your contention will not make it onto my flow. Or, I simply won't care enough to write it down. Far-reaching analyses of improperly used evidence may just result in my perplexion and the audience's confusion. However, evidence-based conclusions that show a deep understanding of the topic are always appreciated. I do NOT like Kritik arguments in high school debate. I'm slightly ok with them in LD. Do NOT run them unless you have NO OTHER OPTION.
In-Depth Prefs:
Please - Always signpost.
Speed is whatever. I can handle spreading, but if your competitor asks you to go slower and you ignore them, I will be very annoyed. The purpose of the debate is to educate - not bulldoze. If you need to spread to win, I won't vote for you. IMO, three strong arguments are better than 6 weak ones. If you want to spread, become a policy debater. A couple of my best friends in High School made it to Parli finals at the state championship without spreading, so there's no need to do it.
Flow Style is typically on an Excel sheet, so if you're speaking so fast that I can't type it and I miss a contention ... you're going too fast.
Evidence is the most critical component to me. To me, the best defense in debate is a strong defense. Well constructed arguments should have citations and explain to me why a case should win. However, evidence isn't everything. If you are concerned about recency or methodology, make it ONE point. Don't turn the debate into a squabble over those things because I stop listening. Evidence is concrete and empirically explains the case.
Theory is a stepping stone in debate. It's fun to listen to if it's thoughtful and enhances your case. However, if you're just throwing around debate jargon and my paper starts to look like a million arrows, then the theory point isn't worth it. Because I did LD for a while, I can follow inherency/solvency/topicality/harms. I think they have great potential to either make a great case phenomenal... or to give me a minor headache for the afternoon.
Attitude is key. Be kind or lose, it's just a tournament. Your opponent may be new and trying this out for the first time - don't be the person who ruins public speaking for someone. Don't be a dingus. A dingus is too fast, mean, demeaning, rude, etc. Keep it pleasant, no chair-throwing. :)
Kritiks in HS Debate imo usually waste the hour - not always, but they rarely convince me. As in, out of the hundreds of rounds I've watched - there's only been one time I've voted for it. And that was a practice round. If you want your Kritik to win, ground it in evidence - but for the most part, I don't care for a Kritik. I don't recommend running one unless this is one of the worst debate topics ever generated. Please don't run them. I am slightly more ok with them in LD debate, but mainly because I know the debate has been trending that way for a while and some topics are dependent on them now. So... I'll listen in LD.... but I can't guarantee I'll like it.
Kritiks in College Debate are fine, but I still don't like them very much.
About me:
Head Coach of Redlands High School
Premier Distinction and 5 Diamond competitor
State Runner-up in Informative 2017
Stanford 2018 Informative Champion
Frequently hungry in round
*Isabella *Cofresi
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Lee *Ding
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Allanah *Elster
Hire
None
*JV *Fluehr
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Malene *Garcia
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Milla *Gloria
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Lydia *Heim
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Caleb *Hernandez
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Matthew *Holderman
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Melanie *Jakubowicz
Nova
None
*Janay *Joseph
Hire
8 rounds
Last changed on
Sat October 14, 2023 at 5:05 AM EDT
I have judged both speech/ IEs and debate events since 2016. I am currently studying for a Master of Arts in Media Studies. I have a Bachelor of Arts in History, and have previously competed in various Speech and Debate events for all four years of high school, was previously Vice President of the Model United Nations team at Nova Southeastern University, and have chaired several Model UN Committees since 2019.
My preferences are somewhat traditional. I make sure to flow notes throughout the round, weighing and articulating both the good and the bad that happens while writing my critiques. I will not tolerate disrespectful behavior which includes but is not limited to talking while a competitor is speaking, interrupting competitors excessively while they are answering a question, as well as racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, xenophobia, etc.
Debate
Please assume that I know nothing about the topic when the round begins. Clearly state all definitions, clarify your framework, and elaborate on all progressive arguments with clarity as if I am not familiar with them (kritiks, theory, topicality, ect). I will only allow spreading as long as it is explicitly requested before the round begins, and the opponent(s) is/are comfortable with it as well. Here are a few more of my general preferences regarding debate events:
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Keep crossfires and cross examination civil and remember to respect one another
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When it comes to weighing, I like to focus on links and impacts. The strongest usually win the round.
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Make sure links and impacts are clear. If a claim is introduced without this support, I will consider the argument dropped.
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Disclosure depends on the tournament however I will only disclose who wins the round if both parties are comfortable with me doing so.
Lincoln Douglas and Policy Debate
I have competed in LD for two years in high school, and am familiar with most values/ criterion, theories, Ks ect that come along with it. Still, make sure to clearly state all definitions and framework as if me or your opponent is not familiar with it. A few more preferences:
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Do not abuse your opponent
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Can run Ks as long as they relate to the topic at hand
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Assertiveness is fine in cross-examination, just don’t confuse it with aggression
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If you want to win the round, make sure you’re crystallizing your arguments, weigh positions, and clearly state why your position should win
Public Forum Debate
In between my two years of debate, I competed in PF for about a year as well, and have been judging the event for over four years. You can pretty much run whatever you want as long as it makes sense. A few more general preferences:
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Make sure all cards and information are up to date, within the past five years is my allowance unless the reference of a historical event is necessary for the framework of the case
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Anything mentioned in Summary and Final Focus has to be mentioned earlier on in debate or else it will be scratched from the record
Speech and IEs
For all speech and IEs, I generally rank based on creativity, performance, delivery, and passion for the subject at hand.
For Extemp and Oratory, I follow general guidelines but vote on cohesiveness and clarity of the arguments. Do not go up there and spout truisms without evidence; there needs to be a purpose to them. How you present the facts also matters. Make sure to distinguish some of these guidelines for Info. You can have a creative informative speech with meaning and without explicitly mentioning your argument.
As for Interp events, I lean heavily into creativity, strong structure/ story line, and blocking that is intentional. I need to see clear character development, and if I feel your performance is lacking in this area you lose structure. Feel free to go outside of the usual conventions for these events. If your performance is unlike anything that I’ve seen before, you’ll usually get the 1.
Congress
For Congress, on the argumentative side it's very similar to the criteria I listed in the Debate section. I rank based on meaningful clash, solid argumentations, excellent weighing, and comparison of impacts. Your performance and presentation can be excellent, but if the argument falls apart during your speech I will count that against your overall rank. As for the PO, you will always be ranked within the top 6 depending on the tournament. Where you fall on the overall rank will depend on how you run the chamber based on equity, fairness, flexibility, and inclusivity.
*Claire *Kankirawatana
Hire
None
*Benjamin *Krejci
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Julia *Kreutzer
Hire
None
*Amy *Le
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Alexis *McKenzie
Hire
None
Last changed on
Mon January 29, 2024 at 7:54 AM MDT
My name is Kasey and I'm a senior at Whitman College competing in parliamentary debate.
Background: 4 years of high school LD, Idaho circuit.
Speaking Preferences
If you want to talk fast, go for it! – with a few warnings. Online platforms are sometimes not good for clarity, so keep that in mind. If I am unable to make out your argument, I will ask you to slow down, and if your opponent is unable to understand, I ask them to do the same. if your opponent continually asks you to slow or clear and you don't, consider the round lost right there. access comes first, always.
Things I wholeheartedly love: signposting and brief off-time roadmaps. make it easy for me to know where you are, please.
Argument Preferences
You can throw pretty much any argument at me and I'll flow it. If I can tell you're running a progressive argument or speaking super quickly just to make your opponent uncomfortable (or you know they won't be able to handle it), we will have a problem. If you want to run something off the wall, you can, but if you are unsure if your opponent is familiar with those kinds of arguments, I just ask you to ask. It's something small we all can do to prioritize education in this space without alienating other debaters. Access first, always.
Warrant, don't forget impact calc,use your framework. I will listen to everything.
---
We might frame debate as just a game, but what's said in this space can have very real, very tangible impacts on the well-being of others. Don't forget that.
if you're not having fun I'm convinced you're doing debate wrong :)
*Britton *Musall
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Breanna *Nesbeth
Nova
None
*Timothy *O'Brien
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Deana *Perez
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Sophie *Pledger
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Saranya *Putrevu
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Josef *Rademacher
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Elijah *Rakha-Sheketoff
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Jack *Reckner
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Madelin *Reynolds
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Brian *Segura
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Julia *Thompson
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Annabella *Walker
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Annika *Wines
Hire
8 rounds
None
*Desmond *Young
Hire
8 rounds
None
Lowery Abel
Westglades Middle School
None
Anand Acharya
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Ricardgo Aguilar
Nova
None
Criselda Aldan
Mount Carmel School (MS)
None
Erin Alford
Seminole Middle School
Last changed on
Fri January 12, 2024 at 4:07 PM EDT
I have been a middle school coach for speech and debate for the last 8 years. I do NOT judge PFD/LD/CX/WSD on a weekly or even monthly basis. I follow the original idea that PFD is supposed to be kept to a conversational pace, where we could grab anyone off the street to be able to judge your round.
Things you should be aware of if I am judging you:
- Do not speed through your case/speeches. If you do, I will miss multiple things and if I cannot understand what you are saying I will give the win to your opponents. If speeding is required to get through your case, this is where you learn how to change it up (adapt to your judge).
- Do not be rude to your opponents OR to your teammate. Making rude comments/gestures/body movements is not acceptable. Your speaks will go down if you are rude.
- I have my own way of flowing and will do my best to make sure I get everything, including dropped/unanswered contentions. Please, please, please do not lie about what your opponents did/did not say.
- I like evidence being used to be from reputable sources.
- Do not run a case that has NOTHING to do with the topic (those of you trying to bring LD into PFD, no "K"s)!
Mary Allen
Hindman Elementary School
None
Nellie Alliston
Sacred Heart Catholic Jr High
None
Manish Amin
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
None
Melanie Anderson
E A Olle Middle School
None
Wendy Atwell
St Mary's Hall
None
Kevin Avila
Hire
8 rounds
None
Brooke Bailey
Milton Academy Middle
None
Kayla Baker
Glades Middle School
None
Laura Barris
Forest Glen Middle School
None
Last changed on
Sun September 13, 2020 at 3:32 PM EDT
I am a parent judge with experience judging PF and speech. I enjoy debate arguments that can be flowed logically and don't rely too heavily on evidence in order to be understood. Not a fan of spreading. I appreciate spirited debates but expect everyone to be respectful of one another. Thankfully, this is rarely an issue.
Best of luck!
Ric Blackwell
Bak Middle School of the Arts
None
Caitlin Bliss
Poly Prep Middle School
Last changed on
Sat January 6, 2024 at 3:59 AM EDT
I coach Congress and Speech, so I value argumentation and delivery equally. Listen to the room, avoid rehash, be responsive to arguments. Finally, be respectful—we are here to grow, not to tear each other down.
Maggie Blosky
Princeton Academy Of The Sacred Heart
None
Karen Boase
Lakewood Speech & Debate
None
Leah Bolitho
Silver Trail
None
Lisa Boulais
Wicklund K-8
8 rounds
Last changed on
Sun January 14, 2024 at 2:01 AM PDT
I am a parent judge with five years of experience judging traditional debate.
I appreciate clearly developed arguments and good judge instruction (explain why you've won the round). I take thorough notes throughout the debate but don't keep a rigorous flow. The most convincing arguments in the round are the ones that will win my ballot.
Please provide a clear framework (including definitions) and explain how your offense functions under that framework.
Alyssa Brown
Carroll Middle School
None
Jacqueline Brown
Bible Center School
None
Amanda Burton
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Amy Burton
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Michael Caplan
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
Last changed on
Wed September 30, 2020 at 5:33 AM MST
I was a high school cross-examination (a.k.a. Policy) debater from 1987-1991 at Jesuit High School New Orleans. I am now an assistant coach for Debate at Phoenix Country Day School as well as the Physics teacher. In between, I earned a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and B.A. in Plan II from the University of Texas at Austin (1996), a PhD in Chemical Engineering from MIT (2001), post-doctoral research in Cell Biology at the Duke University Medical Center (2001-2002), and then was an Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Arizona State University (2003-2018).
For Public Forum debate rounds:
1) I do flow. Although I can flow at speed (see below for Policy debate), Public Forum rounds should be about convincing me that your overall argument and position on the resolution is correct. What does this mean? It means that, although dropping an argument is important, it doesn't mean that the argument that was dropped becomes absolute truth. It does mean that your opponent did not refute your original claim and warrant, but you still need to explain how that claim and warrant support your overall position in the round in summary and final focus to convince me that your overall position on the resolution is better than your opponent's. So, in PF rounds, I discourage speed. Speak at a normal pace and trust that I am keeping track of your arguments. Signpost (tell me what argument you're responding to or what overall contention you're talking about) so that I can put your responses where they should go.
2) Use cross-examination periods to ask questions you genuinely want your opponent to answer. Listen to their response respectfully. Don't use cross-examination periods to make arguments. And definitely do not use cross-examination periods to badger or bully your opponent.
3) In summaries and final focuses (foci?), make sure to write my ballot for me by telling me how I should view the various positions in the round. If you use frameworks, tell me how I should view the various positions in the round as if I accept your framework OR your opponent's framework -- do both because you don't know which framework I'm going to find more convincing. The more you can bring the various different individual claims into a holistic view on the resolution, the more you're writing my ballot for me. You still need to win those individual claims (so don't forget to spend some time doing that), but synthesizing those claims into a coherent view of the resolution will go a long way to helping me decide the round. And that's even better if you bring your opponent's claims into that synthesis. For example: "Even if you agree with my opponent's claim that _______, there are still ### million people who benefit because of ________ that we're proposing due to [warrant for that claim]."
4) Remember that clash is critical. Go beyond the taglines to debate the warrants (reasoning) behind the other team's arguments vs. the reasoning behind your own arguments. Then go one step further and help me understand how your argument fits into the larger context of the round to "write my ballot" during your rebuttal / summary / final focus speeches.
For Policy debate rounds:
1) I need to understand what you say. I am fine with spreading as long as you enunciate clearly. And, if a particular argument is critical to your strategy, slow down a bit on the tagline to make sure I flow it properly. I will not be on the evidence chain. I believe debate is a speaking event, so I need to hear you say things and understand them at the speed you deliver them. If a piece of evidence is argued in the round such that my reading what it says after the round may affect my decision, I will ask for a limited number of pieces of evidence after the round. If you want me to look at a particular piece of evidence, tell me that in your speech and explain why reading it should be important to deciding the round.
2) In rebuttals, make sure to write my ballot for me by telling me how I should view the various positions in the round as if I accept your framework OR your opponent's framework -- do both because you don't know which framework I'm going to find more convincing. Unless one or both teams argue to judge the round otherwise, I default to hypothesis testing of the resolution. But I'm certainly willing to be convinced to judge the round in other ways. For example, if you argue a K, just make sure to do a good job convincing me that it's important for me to judge based on the K rather than on the typical framework (i.e., hypothesis testing).
Specifically regarding Ks, if it seems to me that you're just running the K to score a win in the debate round rather than actually caring about the issue being Kritik-ed, you can convince me to vote on it; but you'll find it easier to convince me if you actual care about the issue and legitimately believe the other team is exacerbating the problem. Also, for both Aff and Neg, focus on the "Alt". The Alt should be concrete to the point where I can understand what happens in the world if we do the Alt.
Other argument types:
T - Of course. My default is hypothesis testing unless you tell me otherwise.
CP - A good counterplan debate is great fun. Although CPs are easiest when non-topical and competitive, I'm willing to hear theory arguments that I should allow an exception.
DAs - These are the meat of all good hypothesis testing rounds. Make sure to pay good attention to the internal links in the DA. Also, I'm happy to vote for DAs that don't cause nuclear war. When I debated, my favorite DA was "deficits" which often just led to economic collapse. I'm happy to vote for a DA that causes highly probably harms that are moderately bad, and I find those more convincing than DAs that cause unlikely but world-ending harm.
Case - Please argue case. If nothing more, if you're Neg, please at least make a few arguments against case's solvency and whatever their biggest harms are. If the Neg leaves case with 100% solvency and no doubt about the harms, I find it hard to vote down the Aff. Vice-versa when you're Aff.
Performance Affs/Negs - Your #1 goal in the round (sine qua non) will be to convince me that I should judge the round in a non-traditional way that matches your performance goal. For the Neg, I've found that taking the strategy that I shouldn't vote in that non-traditional way isn't always best -- good Affs are very prepared for that strategy (so this usually only wins against teams that aren't well prepared to run their Aff). So, as the Neg, consider the strategy of accepting the basic premise but do it better (e.g., more inclusive, etc.) than the Aff.
For all of these, remember that clash is critical. Go beyond the taglines to debate the warrants (reasoning) behind the other team's arguments vs. the reasoning behind your own arguments. Then go one step further and help me understand how your argument fits into the larger context of the round to "write my ballot" during your rebuttal speeches.
Steven Carlo
Gulfstream Academy Of Hallandale Beach
8 rounds
None
Alyssa Carvazos
Glades Middle School
Last changed on
Sun January 5, 2020 at 8:27 AM EDT
Hello debaters!
I am currently a student at the University of Pennsylvania, and I did PF all four years of high school.
I really hope it goes without saying that there should be no progressive debate (Ks, theory, etc.) However, you may speak quickly if it's necessary to finish cases or respond to everything you'd like me to flow.
I don't flow cross. No need for defense in first summary. I'm a very traditional PF judge :)
In general, a loose suggestion for last speeches: summary should focus on FW, warrants, definitions, and why you've won those. Then, the FF should weigh impacts that you have access to after the summary. Don't bring up random impacts that weren't even touched upon by the summary. Even if they're mentioned for 2 seconds, that's fine.
Let me know if you have any questions pre-round, and have a great tournament!
Anthony Catale
John F. Kennedy Catholic School
None
Monica Cavazos
St Mary's Hall
8 rounds
None
Teresa Chang
Seminole Middle School
None
Jodi Cherian
Coral Springs Middle School
8 rounds
None
Sheetal Chhaya
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Steve Clemmons
Hire
8 rounds
Last changed on
Fri January 5, 2024 at 11:32 PM PDT
Steve Clemmons
Debate Coach, Saratoga HS, proving that you can go home again.
Former Associate Director of Forensics University of Oregon, Santa Clara University, Debate Coach Saratoga High School
Years in the Activity: 20+ as a coach/director/competitor (Weber, LMU, Macalester, SCU and Oregon for college) (Skyline Oakland, Saratoga, Harker, Presentation, St. Vincent, New Trier, Hopkins, and my alma mater, JFK-Richmond R.I.P. for HS) (Weber State, San Francisco State as a competitor)
IN Public Forum, I PREFER THAT YOU ACTUALLY READ EVIDENCE THAN JUST PARAPHRASING. I guess what I am saying is that it is hard to trust your analysis of the evidence. The rounds have a flavor of Parliamentary Debate. Giving your opponent the entire article and expecting them to extract the author's intent is difficult. Having an actual card is key. If I call for a site, I do not want the article, I want the card. You should only show me the card, or the paragraph that makes your article.
This is not grounds for teams to think this means run PARAPHRASE Theory as a voter. The proliferation of procedural issues is not what this particular event is designed to do. You can go for it, but the probability of me voting for it is low.
How to WIN THE DAY (to borrow from the UO motto)
1. TALK ABOUT THE TOPIC. The current debate topic gives you a lot of ground to talk about the topic and that is the types of debates that I prefer to listen to. If you are a team or individual that feels as though the topic is not relevant, then DO NOT PREF ME, or USE A STRIKE.
2. If you are attempting to have a “project” based debate (and who really knows what it means to have a project in today's debate world) then I should clearly understand the link to the topic and the relevance of your “project” to me. It can't always be about you. I think that many of the structural changes you are attempting to make do not belong in the academic ivory tower of debate. They belong in the streets. The people you are talking about most likely have never seen or heard a debate round and the speed in which some of this comes out, they would never be able to understand. I should know why it is important to have these discussions in debate rounds and why my ballot makes a difference. (As an aside, no one really cares about how I vote, outside the people in the round. You are going to have to convince me otherwise. This is my default setting.)
3. Appeals to my background have no effect on my decision. (Especially since you probably do not know me and the things that have happened in my life.) This point is important to know, because many of your K authors, I have not read, and have no desire to. (And don't believe) My life is focused on what I call the real world, as in the one where my bills have to be paid, my kid educated and the people that I love having food, shelter, and clothing. So, your arguments about why debate is bad or evil, I am not feeling and may not flow. Debate is flawed, but it is usually because of the debaters. The activity feeds me and my family, so think about that before you speak ill about the activity, especially since you are actively choosing to be involved
SPEAKER POINTS
They are independent of win/loss, although there is some correlation there. I will judge people on the way that they treat their partner, opponents and judge. Don't think that because I have revealed the win, your frustration with my decision will allow you to talk slick to me. First, I have no problem giving you under ten-speaker points. Second, I will leave the room, leaving you talking to yourself and your partner. Third, your words will have repercussions, please believe.
FLASHING AND PREP TIME (ESPECIALLY FOR PUBLIC FORUM)
One of my basic rules for debate is that all time comes from somewhere. The time limits are already spelled out in the invite, so I will stick to that. Think of it as a form of a social contract.
With an understanding that time comes from somewhere, there is no invisible pool of prep time that we are to use for flashing evidence over to the other team. Things would be much simpler if you got the cards DURING CX/Crossfire. You should either have a viewing computer, have it printed out, or be willing to wait until the speech is over. and use the questioning time to get it.
Evidence that you read in PF, you should have pulled up before the round. It should not take minutes to find evidence. If you are asking for it, it is coming out of your prep time. If it is longer than 20 seconds to find the evidence, it is coming out of the offending teams time.
CX/Crossfire
This should be primarily between the person who just spoke and the person who is not preparing to speak. Everyone gets a turn to speak and ask/answer questions. You are highlighting a difference in ability when you attempt to answer the questions for your partner, and this will be reflected on your speaker points. Crossfire for PF should really be the one question, one answer format. If you ask a question, then you should fall back and answer one from your opponent, or at least ask if a follow up is acceptable. It is not my fault if your question is phrased poorly. Crossfire factors into my speaker points. So, if you are allowing them to railroad you, don't expect great points. If you are attempting to get a bunch of questions in without allowing the other side to ask, the same thing will be reflected in your points.
Evidence in PF
My background is in policy debate and LD as a competitor. (I did CEDA debate, LD and NDT in college and policy debate and LD in high school) I like evidence and the strategy behind finding it and deploying it in the round. I wish PF would read cards. But, paraphrasing is a thing. Your paraphrase should be textual, meaning that you should be able to point to a paragraph or two in the article that makes your point. Handing someone the article is not good enough. If you can't point to where in the article your argument is being made, then all the other team has to do is point this out, and I will ignore it. This was important enough that I say it twice in my paradigm.
This is far from complete, but feel free to ask me about any questions you might have before the round.
Lauren Cocroft
Lathrop Intermediate
None
Kaylee Coffman
Hire
8 rounds
None
Jason Conley
Hindman Elementary School
None
Regan Conley
Hindman Elementary School
None
Ivette Connell
Vela Middle School
None
Jenny Cook
Hire
8 rounds
None
Tony Copeland
Paducah Middle School
8 rounds
None
Emmanuel Cruz
Democracy Prep Harlem MS
None
Audrey Dallaire
Attucks Middle School
None
Catherine Daneshvar
West hills middle school
None
Dora Danos
Lyons Creek Middle School
8 rounds
None
Bryan Davis
Spurgeon Intermediate
None
Sara Delaram
Chaparral Star Academy Middle
None
Joele Denis
Hire
8 rounds
None
Katherine Donovan
Sawgrass Springs
8 rounds
Last changed on
Sun May 22, 2022 at 4:39 AM EDT
I will be judging Speech. I am certified in K-12 Speech and Debate. I have been a Debate Coach for 7 years.
Thank you,
Linda Pierre
Bonnie Doss
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Harold Easton
Saipan International
Last changed on
Sun May 15, 2022 at 7:29 PM ChST
My Thoughts on LD - Hope they are helpful
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I look for basics - sound argument - no tricks - know your stuff - keep the flow clean
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I will do my research so I can be as fair as possible.
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I appreciate being able to follow - While I appreciate you want to get as much data into your presentation - please do not talk so fast I cannot follow what you are trying to say
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I believe in useful debate - what is done here should be helpful to one’s career in the real world.
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Clash of values is important. Make sure your values are clear and part of your argument.
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Be clear in why I should think your argument is valid - I do not like bluffing with non verifiable material.
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Proof and connection to values for your position is important
-
As noted above - a good argument at a pace that I can understand is better than lots of good arguments that I cannot follow because of excessive speed. After all, I am supposed to follow what you are saying so i can judge your position vs your opponent.
-
No clash - no win. Clear logical clash well handled is a BIG plus..
-
As noted in #1, I am not a fan of tricks being used to win. Have the best argument for your position, well handled and well presented.
-
I need to be able to see you - proper body language is part of the Debate. This is public speaking exercise soooooo - eye contact, body language and posture, etc. are important and add to the decision - without it winning is difficult, but it does not bring a win without the support of solid argument backed by solid values.
-
How you handle adversity in the cross is very important -that is where the battle is won.
Carolyn Enevoldsen
Raymond Central Junior High
None
Chris Esparza
Coakley Middle School
Last changed on
Mon January 22, 2024 at 4:29 AM CDT
I want to see you become the character(s) you are portraying and have the most believability in the role. Often times in the speech world, I see so many students caught up in the “statement” of the piece, they are no longer focusing on the acting.
I want to see completely fleshed out characters and actors who have thought about each moment! Breathing, operative words, and event work is crucial.
Blocking should be creative but not steal focus. It should be used to enhance your piece and not done for the sake of doing so.
passion and creativity in OO, INFO, and Extemp is ranked highest! When everyone has the same great analysis, it’s the small things like the intellectual way you created your AGD or vehicle that make you stand out!
Lorelisa Espiritu
Green Meadow School
None
Shadi Farokhzad
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Chandra Fitzpatrick
Gulfstream Academy Of Hallandale Beach
8 rounds
None
Koji Flynn-Do
The Harker Middle School
Last changed on
Sat October 10, 2020 at 3:03 AM PDT
Be kind to one another.
I did PF and a little policy in high school.
I flow on a spreadsheet, so if I'm not typing during your summary/final focus I'm likely just copying and pasting your extensions.
You can go fast (I'll call clear if I can't understand you).
Cross isn't for making arguments. Please don't cut each other off.
Ask me any questions you have!
Ken Fong
Westridge School
None
Steve Frank
Chaparral Star Academy Middle
None
Nancy Freiling
Fresta Valley Christian School
None
Last changed on
Fri January 5, 2024 at 10:19 AM CDT
Debate should be an educational and communicative activity. I look for debaters that can discuss the topic with intelligence and honesty. Any attempts to play games with my emotions or my sentiments will get very low marks on the ballot. Debate the topic and do so with integrity, this is my expectation.
Brian Geffre
Shanley High School
Fargo ND
Sandhya Goli
Pike School
None
Bruce Goodner
The Village Middle School
8 rounds
None
Angela Govig
Almaden Country
None
Cindy Grizzard
The Weiss School
None
Radhika Gudavalli
Pleasanton Middle School
None
Isidro Guerra
Advanced Learning Academy
None
Alyssa Hager
California Connections
None
Amy Hall
Bak Middle School of the Arts
None
Margaret Hall
Woodland Middle School
8 rounds
None
Bailee Harper
Denmark Middle School
None
Jennifer Harper
Denmark Middle School
None
Gloria Hernandez
Emerson Community Charter
None
Barbara Hogan
Advanced Learning Academy
None
Jim Hsiang
Marvin Baker Middle School
None
Hazel Huang
Rosemont Speech and Debate
Last changed on
Fri January 19, 2024 at 1:43 PM EDT
I am a lay, parent judge.
Please make it EXTREMELY CLEAR why you should win IN COMPARISON to your opponent, do not leave the weighing up to the judge.
I will drop progressive arguments (Ks, theory, other things like that). If you run progressive arguments, you should have a second, more straightforward case as well.
Speak slowly and clearly.
my email is huanghazel65@gmail.com
Nancy Huang
Nohl Canyon Elementary School (MS)
Last changed on
Sat February 18, 2023 at 4:15 AM EDT
The following aspects will be observed and evaluated:
-- Face/body expressions
-- Explicitness and clearness of point statements
-- Organization of your arguments (logic and logistics)
-- Contentions and supporting evidences (examples, data, citations, etc.)
-- Speech fluency and tone
-- Question asking and answering (relevance and significance to the topic)
-- (Politeness to opponent and judge)
Stephen Hudson
St Mary's Hall
None
Chad Huffman
The Village Middle School
Last changed on
Wed March 9, 2022 at 4:22 PM CDT
Speaking ease and flow that takes the audience along a journey.
Gestures that appear natural, smooth, and flow naturally with speech.
A presentation that flows naturally and is easy to get lost in the story.
Points that are clear with good supporting material
Ease of speaking as if it were a discussion with a friend or small group of friends.
An emotional context that feels genuine and organic.
Make me laugh, make me wonder, make me cry - I enjoy it all. But most of all, make me believe.
Heather Huffman
The Village Middle School
Last changed on
Thu January 4, 2024 at 11:06 PM CDT
I would consider myself a traditional speech judge. I am very comfortable judging all interp, public address/platform, and limited prep events. I have competed, judged, and coached at all levels (middle school, high school, and collegiate) and am open to the many styles of interp/performance.
As a judge, the thing that matters most to me is that your performance choices are intentional/purposeful. I want to feel like the choices you make are driven by the text. While I appreciate super cool tech/transitions and visually interesting blocking BIG TIME, I also don't like blocking for blocking's sake. If you are incorporating sound effects, etc. in your HIs and DUO/Duet transitions, they need to make sense and have artistic purpose.
Intros matter.
In all speech events, I am looking for the performer to truly CONNECT with their audience. This is just as true (perhaps even more so) for virtual performances. I like polished/clean performances that also feel conversational and authentic. I should always feel as if this is the first time you've spoken these words.
I am pretty picky about clean binder technique in binder events. Your binder tech (sloppy pages turn, etc.) should never pull my focus. This does not mean I don't LOVE cool binder tricks/additions to enhance POI/PR/POE performances. As long as they are clean/polished/purposeful, bring it on! :)
For Platform/Limited Prep Events, I am looking for solid structure (intro, preview/roadmap, conclusion, etc.), good variety of current sources, depth of analysis, and clean/fluent delivery. While delivery is certainly important, a few small fluency issues in limited prep won't bother me - I would ultimately prefer a speech with a strong analysis of the topic that isn't canned.
Overall, just try to have fun, take pride in sharing your stories, and I will have fun with you! :)
Lauretta Huggins
Forest Glen Middle School
None
Kiana Hughley
Toledo School For The Arts
Last changed on
Tue June 18, 2019 at 6:06 AM EDT
Flow judge- arguments, contentions, delivery
Speed - normal/ slightly fast
Show me how well you know this topic
David Hunter
Democracy Prep Bronx Prep MS
None
Zac Jacobson
Bak Middle School of the Arts
None
Anika Jain
The Harker Middle School
Last changed on
Mon February 8, 2021 at 5:19 AM CDT
I was a policy debater at Harker from 2012-2017 and now coach there. I primarily read policy-leaning arguments, and most of my 2NRs consisted of a DA/case, DA/CP, or Topicality. I now primarily judge and coach LD: I would most prefer to judge LARP debates. I would least prefer to judge tricks/theory debates. If you read tricks, phil, ridiculous/frivolous theory, or Ks with "B" letter authors, you will likely lose. RVIs are not a thing.
If you're doing an email chain, I'd like to be on it: anikaluvsla@gmail.com
In broad terms, I'd appreciate if you could use the most warrants and do the most comparisons that you think you need to in order to win. I evaluate arguments by thinking about their relative risk, but don't know if "zero risk" is as much a thing as people say in debates. Your arguments must consist of a claim, warrant, and impact - I will not read your evidence to construct the latter 2 parts of this for you.
CP: with specific solvency advocates are the best; otherwise, are still good. as a longtime 2a, probably lean aff on cp theory but can surely be persuaded otherwise.
DA: good. politics too.
Topicality: enjoyable when there is clear and specific clash, not enjoyable if extremely generic or out of context violations. case lists and impact comparisons are important. don't really want to see your pre written Nebel 2nr
Kritiks: enjoy these when there is a clearly articulated and specific link, not a random set of cards you read in every debate. i am more familiar with kritiks of security, capitalism, etc., and enjoy when the neg can point to specific things regarding the affirmative rather than blanket statements. I also enjoy the use of historical examples and well thought out impacts in these debates. The alt is very important. I am not inclined to voting on a K without a clear explanation of the alt. not interested in arguments that rely on the idea that death is good, not real, or anything similar to that.
Planless Affs: I went for framework against every planless aff I ever debated: do with that information what you will. topical version of the aff will compose a significant part of my decision in these debates, though I've come to think it's not necessary. I also do not think it necessarily would have to solve the aff.
Theory: I probably have some predispositions but will try my best to put them aside when I judge your debate. Especially in LD, I have a low threshold for what I consider a dumb argument (read: rvi, spec, afc), and I don't particularly want to judge a debate where you throw out a bunch of random shells and see what sticks.
Speaker Points: I'm a pretty sarcastic person, so I appreciate some of that and humor (while still maintaining respect). Be nice but bold, and use CX well. If you are not clear and I do not hear an argument then that is on you: be clear enough to convey the arguments you want to win on. I'm becoming increasingly annoyed with lots of CX/prep spent asking your opponent to list all the arguments they made, or waiting forever for a marked copy so you can see what cards they skipped- you should be flowing.
Mallika Jain
Silver Trail
None
Richard Johnson
Falcon Cove Middle School
None
Serena Jones
William Thomas
None
Chris Jordan
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Kimberly Kannal
Indian Ridge Middle School
None
Chizu Kataoka
Robert Lanier Middle School
8 rounds
Last changed on
Fri October 2, 2020 at 6:12 AM CDT
I am a parent judge and most of my judging experience is in Individual Events.
For Debate events: don't speak too quickly and no spreading.
Your key arguments should be summarized at the end.
Be professional, don’t be rude. You will get good speaks if you speak clearly and present your arguments well.
Meeta Kaur
Chaparral Star Academy Middle
None
Denay Kibbler
Lakewood Speech & Debate
None
Soo Jung Kim
Walter Reed Middle
None
Last changed on
Wed January 3, 2024 at 8:02 AM PDT
Background
I have no personal speech and debate competition experience. I began judging in early 2014; I have been involved in the community ever since and have attended/judged/run tournaments at a rate of 30 tournaments per year give or take. The onset of online in early 2020 has only pushed that number higher. I began coaching in 2016 starting in Congressional Debate and currently act as my program's Public Forum Coach.
General Expectations of Me (Things for You to Consider)
Consider me "flay" on average, "flow" on a good day. Here is a list of things NOT to expect from me:
- Don't make assumptions about my knowledge. Do not expect me to know the things you know. Always make the choice to explain things fully.
- Post-round me if you want, I don't care. If you want to post-round me, I'll sit there and take it. Don't think I'll change my mind though. All things that should influence my decision need to occur in the debate and if I didn’t catch it, that’s too bad.
- Regarding Disclosures/Decisions. Do not expect me to disclose in prelims unless the tournament explicitly tells me to. I will disclose all elim rounds unless explicitly told not to.
- Clarity > Speed. I flow on paper, meaning I most likely won't be looking at either competitor/team too often during the round. Please don't take that as a discouraging signal, I'm simply trying to keep up. This also means I flow more slowly than my digital counterparts, so there may be occasions that I miss something if you speak too quickly.
- Defense is not sticky in PF. Coverage is important in debate; it allows for a sensible narrative to be established over the course of the round. Summary, not Rebuttal, is the setup for Final Focus.
Should other things arise, I will add them to this list at that time.
General Debate Philosophy
I am tech > truth by the slimmest of margins. I am here to identify a winner of a debate, not choose one. Will I fail at this? At times yes. But I believe that the participants in the round should be the sole factors in determining who wins and loses a debate. At its most extreme, I will vote (and have voted) for a competitor/team who lies IF AND ONLY IF those lies are not called out/identified by the opposing competitor/team. If I am to practice tabula rasa, then I must adopt this line of reasoning. Will I identify in my ballot that a lie was told? Absolutely.
Why take this hard line? Because debate is a space where we can practice an open exchange of information. This means it is also a space where we can practice calling out nonsense in a respectful manner. The conversations of the world beyond debate will not be limited by time constraints or speaker order nor will there be an authority or ombudsman to determine what is truth. We must do that on our own. If you hear something false, investigate it. Bring it to my attention. Explain the falsehood. Take the time to set the record straight.
Public Forum / Lincoln Douglas Paradigm
Regarding speaker points:
I judge on the standard tabroom scale. 27.5 is average; 30 is the second coming manifested in speech form; and 20 and under is if you stabbed someone in the round. Everyone starts at a 27.5 and depending on how the round goes, that score will fluctuate. I expect clarity, fluidity, confidence and decorum in all speeches. Being able to convey those facets to me in your speech will boost your score; a lack in any will negatively affect speaker points. I judge harshly: 29+ scores are rare and 30 is a unicorn. DO NOT think you can eschew etiquette and good speaking ability simply due to the rationale that "this is debate and W's and L's are what matter."
Do not yell at your opponent(s) in cross. Avoid eye contact with them during cross as much as possible to keep the debate as civil as it can be. If it helps, look at me; at the very least, I won’t be antagonistic. I understand that debate can get heated and emotional; please utilize the appropriate coping mechanisms to ensure that proper decorum is upheld. Do not leave in the middle of round to go to the bathroom or any other reason outside of emergency, at which point alert me to that emergency.
Structure/Organization:
Please signpost. I cannot stress this enough without using caps and larger font. If you do not signpost or provide some way for me to follow along your case/refutations, I will be lost and you will be in trouble. Not actual trouble, but debate trouble. You know what I mean.
Framework (FW):
In Public Forum, I default to Cost-Benefit Analysis unless a different FW is given. Net-Benefit and Risk-Benefit are also common FWs that I do not require explanation for. Broader FWs, like Lives and Econ, also do not require explanation. Anything else, give me some warranting.
In Lincoln Douglas, I need a Value and Value Criterion (or something equivalent to those two) in order to know how to weigh the round. Without them, I am unable to judge effectively because I have not been told what should be valued as most important. Please engage in Value Debates: FWs are the rules under which you win the debate, so make sure your rules and not your opponent's get used in order to swing the debate in your favor. Otherwise, find methods to win under your opponent's FW.
Do not take this to mean that if you win the FW debate, you win the round. That's the beauty of LD: there is no dominant value or value criterion, but there is persuasive interpretation and application of them.
Should other things arise, I will add them to this list at that time.
Regarding the decision (RFD):
I judge tabula rasa, or as close to it as possible. I walk in with no knowledge of the topic, just the basic learning I have gained through my public school education. I have a wide breadth of common knowledge, so I will not be requiring cards/evidence for things such as the strength of the US military or the percentage of volcanos that exist underwater. For matters that are strictly factual, I will rarely ask for evidence unless it is something I don’t know, in which case it may be presented in round regardless. What this means is that I am pledging to judge ONLY on what I hear in round. As difficult as this is, and as horrible as it feels to give W’s to teams whom I know didn’t deserve it based on my actual knowledge, that is the burden I uphold. This is the way I reduce my involvement in the round and is to me the best way for each team to have the greatest impact over their debate.
A few exceptions to this rule:
- Regarding dropped points and extensions across flow: I flow ONLY what I hear; if points don’t get brought up, I don’t write them. A clear example would be a contention read in Constructive, having it dropped in Summary, and being revived in Final Focus. I will personally drop it should that occur; I will not need to be prompted to do so, although notification will give me a clearer picture on how well each team is paying attention. Therefore, it does not hurt to alert me. The reason why I do this is simple: if a point is important, it should be brought up consistently. If it is not discussed, I can only assume that it simply does not matter.
- Regarding extensions through ink: This phrase means that arguments were flowed through refutations without addressing the refutations or the full scope of the refutations. I imagine it being like words slamming into a brick wall, but one side thinks it's a fence with gaping holes and moves on with life. I will notice if this happens, especially if both sides are signposting. I will be more likely to drop the arguments if this is brought to my attention by your opponents. Never pretend an attack/defense didn't happen. It will not go your way.
- Regarding links/internal links: I need things to just make sense. Make sure things are decently connected. If I’m listening to an argument and all I can think is “What is happening?” then you have lost me. I will just not buy arguments at that point and this position will be further reinforced should an opposing team point out the lack of or poor quality of the link.
I do not flow cross-examination. It is your time for clarification and identifying clash. Should something arise from it, it is your job to bring it up in your/team’s next speech.
Regarding Progressive: I'm not an expert on this. I am a content debate traditionalist who has through necessity picked up some things over time when it comes to progressive tech.
A) On Ks: As long as it's well structured and it's clear to me why I need to prioritize it over case, then I'm good. If not, then I'll judge on case.
B) On CPs: Don't run them in PF. Try not to run them in LD.
C) On theory: I have no idea how to judge this. Don't bother running it on me; I will simply ignore it.
Regarding RFD in Public Forum: I vote on well-defined and appropriately linked impacts. All impacts must be extended across the flow to be considered. If your Summary speaker drops an impact, I’m sorry but I will not consider it if brought up in Final Focus. What can influence which impacts I deem more important is Framework and weighing. I don’t vote off Framework, but it can determine key impacts which can force a decision.
Regarding RFD in Lincoln Douglas: FW is essential to help me determine which impacts weigh more heavily in the round. Once the FW is determined, the voters are how well each side fulfills the FW and various impacts extending from that. This is similar to how I vote in PF, but with greater emphasis on competing FWs.
SPEED:
I am a paper flow judge; I do not flow on computer. I’m a dinosaur that way. This means if you go through points too quickly, there is a higher likelihood that I may miss things in my haste to write them down. DO NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, SPREAD OR SPEED READ. I do not care for it as I see it as a disrespectful form of communication, if even a form of communication at all. Nowhere in life, outside of progressive circuit debate and ad disclaimers, have I had to endure spreading. Regardless of its practical application within meta-debate, I believe it possesses little to no value elsewhere. If you see spreading as a means to an end, that end being recognized as a top debater, then you and I have very different perspectives regarding this activity. Communication is the one facet that will be constantly utilized in your life until the day you die. I would hope that one would train their abilities in a manner that best optimizes that skill for everyday use.
Irrational Paradigm
This section is meant for things that simply anger me beyond rational thought. Do not do them.
- No puns. No pun tagline, no pun arguments, no pun anything. No puns or I drop you.
Should other things arise, I will add them to this list at that time.
Katherine Kollitides
Casady School (MS)
None
Robert Kramer
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Prashant Kumar
Pike School
None
Callie LaFlam
Gaston Middle School
None
Nick Lange
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
None
Shana Lardi
Coral Springs Middle School
None
Angela Lee
Rio Norte Junior High School
None
Jacob Leger
David Thibodaux STEM Magnet Academy
None
Bridgette Leonard
Central
None
Chelsea Lerner
The Village Middle School
None
Joy Leschber
Chaparral Star Academy Middle
None
Liam Li
Rosemont Speech and Debate
None
Bill Lindsey
Lee A Tolbert Community Academy
None
Sopirinye Longjohn
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Susie Lopez-Guerra
Advanced Learning Academy
None
Uval Lubarsky
Coral Springs Middle School
None
Andrea Lubell
Beachside Montessori Village
None
Renee Mach
Seminole Middle School
None
Jeff Marcus
Ransom Everglades School
Last changed on
Mon January 8, 2024 at 6:45 AM EDT
Hello everyone,
Good luck to all participants. I am an open-minded judge who will decide the round based on the quality of the debate and not on any personal or preconceived views I may have on the topic.
Some background. I am a trial lawyer. In high school, I was an experienced national circuit, Lincoln-Douglas debater, and won tournaments such as TOC. In college, I was a parliamentary debater and competed nationally and internationally.
I will flow the round but value well-warranted analytics and argument over speed and/or argument and evidence with poor explanation/analysis. I can handle some speed but not at the expense of clarity.
I prefer narrative debate and highly value weighing. I will vote for qualitative argumentation over a series of blippy arguments.
Put me on the email chain at the start of the round.
Fair warning. I want a real, substantive debate on the merits of the issues presented by the topic. I WILL not vote for Ks or other theory-based arguments that do not address the topic.
Pamella Marques
Lyons Creek Middle School
8 rounds
None
Kaitlyn Marshall
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Alex Martel
The Harker Middle School
Last changed on
Sat February 10, 2018 at 4:12 AM PDT
Hey I did speech and policy in high school. Started off with the straight-up style but got to college and saw the rest. I'm better suited for K-style feedback but go with your heart on w.e you want.
I'll evaluate every argument. The debate room can be a fun place so feel free to throw some humor into your speeches. Videos and dank memes are cool.
On an unrelated note, bringing granola bars or some snackage would be appreciated. I don't care much for soft drinks though. In other words please feed me nice food because in-round picnics make everyone's day. <--
What you care about:
Please don't make judges do the work for you on the flow. If you don't do the line-by-line or clearly address an argument, don't get upset if I reach an unfavorable conclusion. Reading me cards without providing sufficient analysis leaves the purpose a bit unclear.
T
Aff- reasonabilty probably has my vote but I can be persuaded to vote for creative and convincing non-topic-related cases.
Neg- Get some substance on the flow. T should not be a go-to-argument. I hate arguments dealing with "should", "USFG", etc and you should too. Impact out the violation. Simply stating that the team is non-topical and attaching some poorly explained standards will not fly or garner support. On K affs remember you can always go further left as an option.
Theory- Typically a pretty boring discussion but if it's creative I'll approve. If you notice yourself thinking "I wish I were reading something else" then it's a clear sign I wish you were too. Remember to slow down on those analytics though- hands cramp.
Case
Aff
Being able to cite authors and point to specific cards = speaks. (same for neg)
Neg
Throw some case defense at the end of your 1nc after you do your off-case arguments. Aff has to answer them but you already know that. Reading through aff evidence and showing power tags or misuse is great.
Da
Aff- if you can turn this in some way then you'll be fine. Point out flaws in the Link story when you can. Figuring out a solid internal link story might be a good idea.
Neg
Internal links will only help you. Let's avoid generic stuff.
CP
Aff
You need to show that it's noncompetitive and you can perm or that their argument just sucks.
Neg
Show a net benefit and how you solve the impacts. Furthermore show how your cp is awesome.
K
Aff
Explain: how case doesn't link, perm, or alt doesn't solve or do anything. Weigh your impacts if appropriate. If the neg is misinterpreting an author and you sufficiently illustrate his/her message, then you'll be doing well in the round.
Neg
I like K's a lot. Hopefully will know what's up. Just explain your story clearly (seriously). Stunt on em.
Side note for everyone: In round actions are easy performative solvency to weigh btw
Performance
Aff
It's going to come down to how well you can explain the impact you are addressing with your performance and the solvency story under framework.
Neg
I suppose you can do framework or T if you have nothing else but try and interact because the aff team will be prepared. Or if you want to go down this route it's cool. Swayed by creativity though.
Bonnie Maya
Gulfstream Academy Of Hallandale Beach
8 rounds
None
Janell McLeod
McNicol Middle School
None
Mehaa Mekala
BASIS Independent Middle
None
Kayla Mercure
MacArthur Fundamental
None
Maria Mettao
Francisco M. Sablan Middle School
None
Jill Meyer
Woodland Middle School
None
Last changed on
Tue January 2, 2024 at 12:25 PM EDT
Jeffrey Miller
Current Coach -- Marist School (2011-present)
Lab Leader -- National Debate Forum (2015-present), Emory University (2016), Dartmouth College (2014-2015), University of Georgia (2012-2015)
Former Coach -- Fayette County (2006-2011), Wheeler (2008-2009)
Former Debater -- Fayette County (2002-2006)
jmill126@gmail.com and maristpublicforum@gmail.com for email chains, please (no google doc sharing and no locked google docs)
Last Updated -- 2/12/2012 for the 2022 Postseason (no major updates, just being more specific on items)
I am a high school teacher who believes in the power that speech and debate provides students. There is not another activity that provides the benefits that this activity does. I am involved in topic wording with the NSDA and argument development and strategy discussion with Marist, so you can expect I am coming into the room as an informed participant about the topic. As your judge, it is my job to give you the best experience possible in that round. I will work as hard in giving you that experience as I expect you are working to win the debate. I think online debate is amazing and would not be bothered if we never returned to in-person competitions again. For online debate to work, everyone should have their cameras on and be cordial with other understanding that there can be technical issues in a round.
What does a good debate look like?
In my opinion, a good debate features two well-researched teams who clash around a central thesis of the topic. Teams can demonstrate this through a variety of ways in a debate such as the use of evidence, smart questioning in cross examination and strategical thinking through the use of casing and rebuttals. In good debates, each speech answers the one that precedes it (with the second constructive being the exception in public forum). Good debates are fun for all those involved including the judge(s).
The best debates are typically smaller in nature as they can resolve key parts of the debate. The proliferation of large constructives have hindered many second halves as they decrease the amount of time students can interact with specific parts of arguments and even worse leaving judges to sort things out themselves and increasing intervention.
What role does theory play in good debates?
I've always said I prefer substance over theory. That being said, I do know theory has its place in debate rounds and I do have strong opinions on many violations. I will do my best to evaluate theory as pragmatically as possible by weighing the offense under each interpretation. For a crash course in my beliefs of theory - disclosure is good, open source is an unnecessary standard for high school public forum teams until a minimum standard of disclosure is established, paraphrasing is bad, round reports is frivolous, content warnings for graphic representations is required, content warnings over non-graphic representations is debatable.
All of this being said, I don't view myself as an autostrike for teams that don't disclose or paraphrase. However, I've judged enough this year to tell you if you are one of those teams and happen to debate someone with thoughts similar to mine, you should be prepared with answers.
How do "progressive" arguments work in good debates?
Like I said above, arguments work best when they are in the context of the critical thesis of the topic. Thus, if you are reading the same cards in your framing contention from the Septober topic that have zero connections to the current topic, I think you are starting a up-hill battle for yourselves. I have not been entirely persuaded with the "pre-fiat" implications I have seen this year - if those pre-fiat implications were contextualized with topic literature, that would be different.
My major gripe with progressive debates this year has been a lack of clash. Saying "structural violence comes first" doesn't automatically mean it does or that you win. These are debatable arguments, please debate them. I am also finding that sometimes the lack of clash isn't a problem of unprepared debaters, but rather there isn't enough time to resolve major issues in the literature. At a minimum, your evidence that is making progressive type claims in the debate should never be paraphrased and should be well warranted. I have found myself struggling to flow framing contentions that include four completely different arguments that should take 1.5 minutes to read that PF debaters are reading in 20-30 seconds (Read: your crisis politics cards should be more than one line).
How should evidence exchange work?
Evidence exchange in public forum is broken. At the beginning of COVID, I found myself thinking cases sent after the speech in order to protect flowing. However, my view on this has shifted. A lot of debates I found myself judging last season had evidence delays after case. At this point, constructives should be sent immediately prior to speeches. (If you paraphrase, you should send your narrative version with the cut cards in order). At this stage in the game, I don't think rebuttal evidence should be emailed before but I imagine that view will shift with time as well. When you send evidence to the email chain, I prefer a cut card with a proper citation and highlighting to indicate what was read. Cards with no formatting or just links are as a good as analytics.
For what its worth, whenever I return to in-person tournaments, I do expect email chains to continue.
What effects speaker points?
I am trying to increase my baseline for points as I've found I'm typically below average. Instead of starting at a 28, I will try to start at a 28.5 for debaters and move accordingly. Argument selection, strategy choices and smart crossfires are the best way to earn more points with me. You're probably not going to get a 30 but have a good debate with smart strategy choices, and you should get a 29+.
This only applies to tournaments that use a 0.1 metric -- tournaments that are using half points are bad.
Marlon Miller
Westpine Middle School
8 rounds
None
Anne Millington
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Isabel Mitre
American Heritage Plantation MS
None
Paula Mitre
American Heritage Plantation MS
None
Alicia Morris
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Scott Morris
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Pamela Mueller
St Mary's Hall
None
Amy Murphy
Hermosa Drive Elementary
None
Sally Navarro
Memorial Middle School
None
Ashley Necyba
Glades Middle School
Last changed on
Mon October 5, 2020 at 2:07 PM EDT
Hi guys :) I hope Blue Key is going well for you and if not, keep your head up! I did PF in Broward for 3 years. Why am I back? For the youth... and to get that coin.
I'm a tired college student with bad attention issues, don't spread. If you see me with caffeine in front of me, you may talk at a fast pace that isn't spreading.
Extend and weigh things pretty please. Call each other out on BS or else I'm going to begrudgingly believe the BS. I'm going to try my best to understand, but if you have a complicated argument explain it. Ask me any questions you have before the round.
If you are mean to your opponents at any point during the debate (especially crossfire), automatic 20 speaks. Other than that, don't worry, your speaks will probably be fine.
Say "Is everyone ready?" not "Is anyone not ready?"
Lisa Nichols
Gaston Middle School
None
Victoria Nishida
Hopwood Middle School
None
Carol O'Leary
Eagles Landing Middle School
None
Jill O’Donnell
Tequesta Trace Middle School
None
Angela Odinet
John Paul The Great Academy MS
None
Ashley Olson
Amicitia American School Fes (MS)
None
Corie Opdyke
Westglades Middle School
None
Charlie Owens
Greenhill School
None
Kathy Owens
Academy ISD
None
Stephanie Oyolu
Robert Lanier Middle School
Last changed on
Wed June 19, 2019 at 5:13 PM CET
I prefer a moderate speaking tempo. I pay a lot of attention to dropped arguments and do not appreciate abusive definitions or observations.
David Paltzik
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Jung Park
Dana Middle School
Last changed on
Sat January 6, 2024 at 12:37 AM PDT
I’m a co-owner of a speech and debate academy and head speech coach with kids who’ve done well nationally. I’m a professional actor and a member of SAG-AFTRA. I am also a licensed attorney in CA with a background in civil litigation. I enjoy traditional LD, especially helping students learn about different philosophies, effective research and writing and developing great analytical and persuasive skills.
What I Value: I value organized, clear and coherent debate with clash. I value traditional debate and especially appreciate creative but applicable values and value criteria. A thoughtful framework and clear organization is very important, both in the framework and argument. I really enjoy hearing well-structured cases with thoughtful framework and value/Value Criterion setups. I have seen cases decided on framework and I think it is very educational for students to learn philosophy and understand more of the philosophical underpinnings of resolutions and even democratic society. Don't forget to show me how you achieved your value better than your opponent, or even how your value and VC achieve your opponent's value better. Don't forget to show your organization of claim-warrants-impact in your arguments. I don't think solvency is necessary in LD, but if you have a persuasive way to bring it in, I am okay with it.
Speed: A proper pace and rhythm of speech is important. I am fine with coherent, articulate fast talking that has a purpose, but I really do not liked spreading. I find it and double-breathing very off-putting and contrary to the fundamentals of public speaking and good communication and the notion that debate should be accessible to all. Normal people sit bewildered watching progressive, circuit-level debaters, unable to comprehend them. Furthermore, it appears that progressive debaters typically give their cases via flash drive to judges and opponents who then read them on their computers during the round and during decision-making. This then becomes an exercise in SPEED READING and battle of the written cases.
Theory: I don’t know much about theory and all the tricks that have trickled down from policy into progressive LD. However, I am open-minded and if done intelligently, such as a valid and applicable spreading K, I believe it can be an interesting way to stop abusive practices in a round.
Final words: I think all of you should be very proud of yourselves for getting up there and doing this activity. Please remember that being courteous, honest and having values you follow are going to take you much further in life than unethical practices such as misrepresenting your evidence cards or being rude to your opponent. Good luck!
Candy Peleaux
Villa Fundamental
None
James Pergola
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
None
Mandie Peterson
Bible Center School
None
Phil Philips
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Paul Plaia
Hire
8 rounds
None
Christina Playton
St Mary's Hall
None
Jennifer Porter
Woodland Middle School
None
Manadakini Prasad
Gale Ranch Middle School
Last changed on
Wed February 27, 2019 at 12:41 PM EDT
I am mom of 2 kids one in college and another one in high school doing debate and speeches for 4 years
I will look for content of the subjects regarding your topic, how confident you are and expressions and body language.
I like civility in the room. Be respectful and gain respect.
You don't need to change your style of speaking for me, I can follow fast speech, if I miss something, I do ask for cards mentioned.
Don't use too much technical stuff, if you do - explain it in short. Otherwise the argument will be lost on me.
I give a lot of weight to impacts and mostly award points based on that.
Do not bring in a controversial topic in the debate unless it is absolutely necessary (eg: terrorism, 9/11, etc)
I do take notes so don't try to pull fast ones, chances are I will catch it (Not all the time though)
I like off time roadmap. Helps me be organized.
Judging style: Individual Speaker:
I award points based on how you speak, and how you conduct yourself in cross. If you are blatantly rude, offensive, racist, sexist, etc, you will be marked down to the lowest.
James Qian
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
Last changed on
Tue June 18, 2019 at 9:47 AM MST
Big fan of arguments in interp!
Nick Rajwany
Coral Springs Middle School
None
Ric Ramnath
Holy Trinity Episcopal Academy (MS)
Last changed on
Wed January 3, 2024 at 3:36 AM EDT
Background: I am a physician and also the head coach of a Speech and Debate team. I was a former high school policy debater, but that does not mean I like spreading or progressive arguments. I'm a dinosaur. See below.
PF
General: The team that is able to support their offense with strong logic and good evidence while having effective defense against their opponents' case will win the round. Duh.
Speed: I am okay with some speed. You will see me flowing during the round, but this is a no spread zone.
Cases: I like strong links to your impacts, which is why I usually find stock arguments to be the strongest. However, I also like squirrels, but only if your links are convincing. I don't believe in tabula rasa judging. If something doesn't make sense or the link is weak, I will be less likely to vote on it. I am a judge after all and that's what I get paid the big bucks to do. Actually, I don't get paid, but if I did get paid, I'm sure it would be big bucks.
Progressive arguments: Please, for all that is good in the world, do not bring progressive LD nonsense into PF. OK? PF is the last bastion of debate purity left. My ROB is to drop progressive arguments and don't try to RVI me.
Crossfire: Be courteous. If someone is trying to be a time hog, I am okay with polite interruption. I sometimes vote on something that comes up in CF, but you should mention it in your speeches if you want me to not forget. Word to the wise: I've dropped many debaters because CF sometimes reveals their lack of knowledge and/or incoherent warranting. That's why I will flow CF.
2nd Rebuttal: You should probably start frontlining now. Starting frontlines in 2nd Summary is a little late in the round and puts too much of a burden on the 1st FF to backline for the first time. Luckily this is a rarity in PF.
Summary: You should extend all offense and defense. I don't believe in sticky defense. If you don't extend in Summary, don't expect me to vote on it if it suddenly shows up in FF. You should start weighing in Summary. In fact, you could start weighing in rebuttals. Don't wait until FF. For Rebuttal, Summary, and FF, please give me logical warrants beyond just reading the cards. In other words, explain the card with logical analysis. I frown on debaters who rely solely on card reading.
Grand CF: This should have balanced involvement of all debaters.
FF: When rounds are close, I will use the FF to write my RFD, so I hope you are a good writer. Weigh impacts, cases, links, evidence. Metaweigh if needed, although I often find metaweighing too subjective unless you can convince me that you outweigh on prereqs. Make sure to extend at least your most important if not all offense. I'm fine if you drop a contention and collapse on one or two, but be careful. I have dropped debaters because they chose the wrong contention to drop (it was actually their best offense).Offense is what wins rounds. But to make sure your offense is better than your opponent's offense, your defense better be legit. It doesn't matter to me when you weigh and give voters...after each issue or at the end...it's up to you.
Evidence ethics: I HATE power cutting where you pull single words from one sentence and attach to a single word two sentences later and think that is a legit way to cut. If the two sentences are logically linked, then okay. But most power cut cards are atrocious. They often end up being straw arguments or horribly paraphrased. I won't necessarily call for a card myself. This is where I need teams to be proactive. If you suspect bad evidence, call for it in round. Call it out in your speech and request that I look at it at the end of the round.
Calling cards: Yes, include me on an email chain when sharing evidence. When requesting evidence, I will consider prep time to begin once the evidence is received. Please announce when that happens and that you are taking prep. Don't be sneaky.
LD
Although I am a former policy debater, I am not a fan of Kritiks, Theory Shells or ROBs. I prefer debate on the substance of the resolution. So in that respect I consider myself more of a traditional LD judge. However, I am okay with plans and CPs because that totally appeals to my policy debate background. However, if you run a plan or CP, make sure you check the boxes on solvency, topicality, uniqueness, and inherency. Even if your opponent doesn't identify all the problems with your plan/CP, I won't be able to weigh your impacts if I don't believe that your plan is going to get you there.
Please don't just read cards. This is a definite problem I've noticed with progressive debaters trying to adapt to a traditional round. You need to give me some solid warranting so I can effectively weigh your arguments and also so I know you know what you are talking about.
In terms of framework, I will go with whoever makes the best case for theirs. But what I've often found is that the contention level debate ends up fitting many frameworks, so it really comes down to your arguments. However, if you go all in on something like util, make sure you have some terminal impacts for me to see exactly how you benefit the majority or maximize pleasure/minimize pain.
Crystallization and more extensive analytics and voters in the 2AR and 2NR is helpful, especially when the round gets muddy. I don't care as much if you drop an opponent's argument as long as that argument is not effective offense.
I don't believe in tabula rasa judging. If I did, then we could use computers to determine the winner of a round and we wouldn't need human judges. So I WILL cast my own opinion on an argument if I think it makes zero sense or is not well warranted. After all, I am a judge and that's my job. I am going to judge your arguments on their merits. I will extend a solid argument unless your opponent applies some good defense or turns.
I am not a fan of spreading. I am okay with some speed, but if I can't understand you, then it is not going on the flow. Even if I get your case via email, I'm not going to be reading it while you spread. This is a verbal activity and, therefore, I will only flow things that are verbally communicated and what I can hear and understand.
At the end of the day, I'm going to give the win to whoever I think had the most offense at the end of the round.
World Schools
I will judge based on traditional World Schools debating i.e. proper terminology, appropriate use of POIs, persuasive style and rhetoric, good logic and argumentation, and most importantly examples and statistics from around the world if appropriate. You will not win if you try to debate using PF or LD technical arguments, squirreling, or spreading. Do not try to burden opponents with limiting definitions or frameworks.
Bernadette Ramos
Maple Elementary
None
Manuela Reyes
Democracy Prep Harlem MS
8 rounds
None
Ragene Rivera
Chaparral Star Academy Middle
None
Tim Root
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Julie Rosenbluth
Lyons Creek Middle School
None
Alka Samant
Albion Middle School
None
Mackenzie Saunders
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Kiana Schmitt
Mission Hills Middle School
8 rounds
None
Dane Schnake
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Pam Schnake
Raymore-Peculiar East Middle School
None
Mitzi Schoeberl
Heritage Middle School
None
Jake Schwartz
Ransom Everglades School
None
Tracy Seaton
Lakewood Speech & Debate
None
Tim Seavey
Robert C. Fisler
Last changed on
Sat April 30, 2016 at 3:01 AM PDT
Public Forum Debate is not Policy debate. While evidence helps an argument, it does not replace and argument and it does not win a debate on its own. I am more swayed by logical, persuasive argumentation that is supported by evidence than a policy round of sparring cards read at a high speed montone.
I DO flow crossfire and I feel the best debate can come out of crossfire. Polite, respectful questions that cut to the core of the argument and help establish direct clash in the round are the best kind of debate.
Be clear in linking arguments to the resolution and give clear voters in final focus as to why one argument wins over another.
Remember this is a learning, activity based around persuasion. Have fun!!
Gomathi Sedhumadhavan
Randolph Middle
Last changed on
Fri May 17, 2019 at 10:03 AM EDT
I vote base on who persuade me more of their position overall. I prefer evidence-based debate. The more persuasive arguments, the better. I should be fine with anything you read, if the warrant for every argument is explained in a manner that I can understand. Be clear if you are going to spread, I won’t deduct speaks unless it’s obvious you aren’t changing anything. If you do spread, flashing, emailing, pocket-boxing, or providing a paper copy of your case to either me or your opponent upon request is mandatory, and you will lose the round if you cannot do this. Do not under any circumstance spread against anyone that cannot understand/flow speed or you will lose. If you are a traditional debater, feel free to go at whatever speed you are comfortable with, this activity isn’t about how fast you go it’s about how good your arguments are. Give clear overviews (Conversational pace or a little faster, cover the flow, isolate important arguments and go for those things first). Collapse to a few voting issues as opposed to going for everything and making me resolve it. Demonstrate a thorough understanding of either the topic, or the position you are reading. I really don't like when debaters are rude to one another. Keep the round civil and courteous.
Andie Segal
Falcon Cove Middle School
None
Emma Semaan
Robert Lanier Middle School
Last changed on
Wed June 19, 2019 at 5:54 AM EDT
Do not spread.
Do not be directly rude to your opponent.
Sass is appreciated but only in appropriate moments and not in excess.
Clash is good, ask good questions
Speaking style and creative argumentation are especially important to me. A large part of my judging will be based on appropriate delivery. Don’t bore me!
Amy Sharpe
Harlingen School Of Health Professions (MS)
None
Simon Sheaff
Hire
8 rounds
Last changed on
Wed January 3, 2024 at 6:57 AM EDT
Background: 4 years at Baylor University, 1-Time NDT Qualifier. Assistant Coach at the U.S. Naval Academy, 2018-2022, Assistant Coach at Dowling Catholic High School, 2019-Present. Currently a Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science and I work for the Legislative Services Agency in Iowa.
Yes I want to be on the email chain: Sheaffly@gmail.com. Also email me with questions about this paradigm.
Paradigms are difficult to write because there are so many potential audiences. From novice middle schoolers to varsity college debaters, I judge it all. As a result, I want everyone reading this paradigm to realize that it was written mostly in terms of varsity college debates. I think about debate a little differently in high school and a little differently when it comes to novice debates, but I hope this gives you a general idea of how to debate in front of me
== TL;DR ==
Do line-by-line. I do not flow straight down and I do not flow off the speech doc. I am a DA/CP/Case kind of judge. I am bad at understanding kritiks and I am biased towards the topic being good. Be nice.
== Top Level - Flowing ==
It has become clear to me after years of judging that most of my decisions center not around my biases about arguments (which I won’t pretend not to have), but rather around my ability to understand your argument. My ability to understand your argument is directly related to how clean my flow is. Thus, it is in your best interest to make my flow very clean. I used to think I was bad at flowing, but I've come to the conclusion that line-by-line and organized debate has become a lost art. Debaters who learn this art are much more likely to win in front of me.
You are NOT as clear on tags as you think you are. Getting every 4th word of a tag is okay only if every 4th word is the key nouns and verbs. This is never true. So slow down on your tags, I am NOT READING THEM.
I’m not gonna flow everything straight down and then reconstruct the debate afterwards. The 1NC sets the order of the debate on the case, the 2AC sets the order of the debate off case. Abide by that order. Otherwise, I will spend time trying to figure out where to put your argument rather than writing it down and that’s bad for you.
Another tip: Find ways to give me pen time. For example, do not read 4 perms in a row. It’s impossible for me to write down all of those words. Plus, it’s always first and you haven’t even given me time to flip my paper over. And then your next argument is always an analytic about how the CP doesn’t solve and then I can’t write that down either. So stop doing things like that.
== Top Level – Arguments ==
Basic stuff: I love creativity and learning from debate. Make it clear to me how much you know about the arguments you are making. I don’t think this means you have to have cut every card you read, but understanding not just the substance of your argument, but the tricks within them is important.
As I said above, the thing that will be a problem for me is not understanding your argument. Unfortunately, this probably impacts Kritik debaters more than policy debaters, but I’ll get to that in a minute.
I am probably a little more truth > tech than most judges. I believe in technical debate, but I also believe that debate is a place where truth is important. I don't care how many cards you have that say something, if the other team asserts it is not true and they are correct, they win the point.
== Top Level - Community Norms ==
1) For online debate, prep time stops when you unmute yourself and say stop prep. A couple of reasons for this. a) I have no way of verifying when you actually stopped prep if you come out and say "we stopped 15 seconds ago" and b) neither do your opponents, which means that you are basically forcing them to steal prep. I don't like it so that's the rule.
2) Debate is a messed-up community already. Don't make it more so. Be nice to each other. Have fun in the debate while you are disagreeing. If you make it seem like you think the other team is stupid during the debate, it's gonna make me grumpy. I love debate and I love watching people do it, but I hate confrontation and I hate it when people get angry about debates that don't matter that much in the long term. Be nice. Please.
3) This is mostly for high schoolers, where I see this issue all the time: If you are going to send a document without your analytics in it, making the version of the doc without the analytics in it IS PREP TIME. You don't get 45 seconds to send the document. Y'all are GenZ, I know you can send an email faster than that. You get 15 seconds before I break in and ask what the deal is. You get 20 seconds before I start prep again.
== Specifics ==
Affirmatives...
...Which Defend the Topic - I enjoy creativity. This includes creative interpretations of topicality. You should also read my thoughts on DAs as they apply to how you construct your advantages. Clear story is good.
...Which Do Not Defend the Topic - I am likely not a great judge for you. I think I may have a reputation as someone who hates these arguments. That reputation is not unearned, I built it up for years. But over time I’ve come to become a lot more accepting of them. There are many of these affirmatives that I think provide valuable debate. The problem I have is that I cannot figure out an interpretation of debate that allows the valuable "K Affs," but limits out the affs that I think are generally created to confuse their way to a win rather than provide actual valuable propositions for debate. I will always think of framework as a debate about what you JUSTIFY, rather than what you DO, and every interpretation I have ever seen in these debates simply lets in too much of the uneducational debates without providing a clear basis for clash.
I realize this sounds like I have been totally brainwashed by framework, and perhaps I have. But I want to be honest about where I'm at. That said, I think the above makes clear that if you have a defensible INTERPRETATION, I am willing to listen to it. You should also look at the section under kritiks, because I think it describes the fact that I need the actual argument of the affirmative to be clear. This generally means that, if your tags are poems, I am not ideologically opposed to that proposition, but you better also have very clear explanation of why you read that poem.
Negative Strategies
Framework: See discussion above. Good strategy. Impact, impact, impact. Education > procedural fairness > any other impact. “Ks are bad” is a bad argument, “their interpretation makes debate worse and uneducational” is a winnable argument. Topical version of the aff goes a long way with me.
Topicality: Good strategy. Impact, impact, impact. Case lists. Why that case list is bad. Affirmatives, you should talk about your education. I love creative interps of the topic if you defend them. But for the love of god slow down.
Disads: Absolutely. Well constructed DAs are very fun to watch. However, see truth vs. tech above – I have a lower threshold for “zero risk of a [link, impact, internal link] etc.” I love Politics DAs, but they’re all lies. I am up-to-date on the news. If you are not, do not go for the politics DA using updates your coaches cut. You will say things that betray that you don’t know what you’re talking about and it will hurt your speaks. Creative impact calc (outside of just magnitude, timeframe, probability) is the best impact calc.
Counterplans: I'm tired of the negative getting away with murder. I am VERY willing to listen to theory debates about some of these crazy process CPs which compete off of a net benefit or immedicacy/certainty. Theory debates are fun for me but for the love of god slow down. Otherwise, yeah, CPs are fine.
Kritiks: Eh. You can see the discussion above about K affs. I used to be rigidly ideological about hating the K. I am now convinced that the K can make good points. But because I was so against them for so long, I don’t understand them. I still think some Kritiks (here I am thinking mostly of French/German dudes) are basically designed to confuse the other team into losing. Problem is, I can’t tell the difference between those Kritiks and other Kritiks, because all Kritiks confuse me.
Very basic Ks are fine. Realism is bad, heg is bad, capitalism is bad, I get. Get much beyond that and I get lost. It's not that I think you're wrong it's that I have always been uninterested so I never learned what you're talking about. I cannot emphasize enough how little I understand what you're talking about. If this is your thing and I am already your judge, conceptualize your K like a DA/CP strategy and explain it to me like I have never heard it before. Literally, in your 2NC say: "We believe that X is bad. We believe that they do X because of this argument they have made. We believe the alternative solves for X." I cannot stress enough how serious I am that that sentence should be the top of your 2NC and 2NR. I have had this sentence in my judge philosophy for 3 years and this has been the top of the 2NC once (in a JV debate!). I do not know how much clearer I can be. Again, I am not morally opposed to Kritiks (anymore), I just do not understand them and I will not vote for something I do not understand. I believe you need a good link. Yes, the world is terrible, but why is the aff terrible. You also need to make your tags not a paragraph long, I never learned how to flow tags that were that long.
Jolie Sherman
West hills middle school
None
Greeshma Shetty
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Piper Showen
Raymore-Peculiar South Middle School
None
Lori Sisto
Bak Middle School of the Arts
Last changed on
Wed September 30, 2020 at 11:35 AM EDT
I have been judging in the Middle School and High School circuit for over six years now. I have judged both varsity PF and speech events at several national tournaments and am pretty familiar with what is expected.
Starting with more general points:
- I want an ORGANIZED case. If I cannot flow your case with ease, you will lose speaker points and I may miss important parts of your case.
- NO SPREADING. I am ok with some speed, but if I cannot understand what you are saying, I will not be able to carry your points in the flow.
- STICK TO THE RESOLUTION. I do NOT want to hear cases off resolution. YOU WILL NOT WIN.
- I like to see good sportsmanship. Don't be overly aggressive and have fun while debating.
Now, some more specific things:
- I need to see impacts. I weigh impacts after the entire round, so you MUST carry them through the round.
- I like frameworks but they MUST be carried through the round. If a framework is dropped, I will not weigh it in the round.
- You will win if you address all of your opponents claims and most/all of your impacts still stand at the end of the round.
- If there is an evidence debate, I most likely will call for your cards at the end of the round. If you fail to provide the evidence that is called by ME, your claim will be dropped.
Have fun at this tournament and debate to your best ability, I look forward to judging you all!
Soumya Sivaraman
Milton Academy Middle
8 rounds
None
Daniel Slowik
Falcon Cove Middle School
8 rounds
None
Marina Smart
Hire
8 rounds
None
Cory Smith
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Susan Smith
Holy Trinity Episcopal Academy (MS)
None
Cecilia Son
The Broadoaks School Of Whittier College
None
Bria Stacy
Hindman Elementary School
None
Mary Stallard
Holy Trinity Episcopal Academy (MS)
None
Kathy Stanczyk
Murray Middle School Speech Team
None
Courtney Stein
Revere Middle School
None
Natalie Steinbrink
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
Last changed on
Wed April 15, 2020 at 6:19 AM MST
Hi all- my name is Natalie Steinbrink and I am an assistant coach at Phoenix Country Day School, where I've been since 2015. I graduated from Arizona State University in 2018 with a degree in English Literature. I am primarily a speech coach, but I do enjoy coaching and watching Congress when I can. Here is what's important to me in a Congressional Debate round:
-Clear argumentation. Don't make me work to understand your argument. Your structure, evidence, links, and impacts should be clear and easy to understand. I can appreciate a complex argument, but if I'm still wondering what your point was by the time we've moved on to the next speech, you haven't done the job.
-Be INVOLVED in the session. Be an active listener and don't get wrapped up in your own speeches (i.e. please don't practice your speech while others are talking). Ask good, varied questions. Be a congressperson who's going to foster good debate in the round (the most fun part of congress!).
-Give me some genuine emotion! This may be the speech coach in me jumping out, but the bills you're debating impact real people in the world, and you should treat them as such. How is anyone going to believe in your argument if you don't act like you believe in it yourself?
-Good delivery is a must. Try to get away from your legal pad as much as possible.
-Be respectful. If you're rude or aggressive to other debaters, you'll be dropped. Plain and simple.
I'm excited to listen to you all, and I hope you're excited as well!
Lory Stewart
Austin Academy
None
Stacey Sundal
Westglades Middle School
None
Ivan Surmik
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Vasu Tangallpalli
BASIS Scottsdale Middle School
None
Fargo Tbakhi
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
George Tennison III
E A Olle Middle School
Last changed on
Wed January 3, 2024 at 7:45 AM CDT
I have been coaching speech and debate since 2000.
First of all, I believe that debate is a communication activity. Consequently, I will be looking for effective communication that includes effective eye contact, diction, inflection, projection, and gesturing.
Furthermore, I expect debaters to speak at a normal rate. If you spread, I will vote for your opponent. My reasoning:
- People do not spread in the real world.
- When you speak at a normal rate, you are forced to prioritize your arguments. Choosing arguments is part of the learning experience in debate.
- When people spread, their syntax frequently suffers.
Finally, I will not fill in the blanks for you. Even if I understand what you are trying to say, it is your job to say it effectively. Likewise, I expect debaters to clearly connect their evidence to the points they are trying to make. Be creative with your arguments, but it is your job to help me understand your arguments.
One last thing: I don't mind esoteric arguments, but I put a high value on practicality, especially when discussing real-world issues and policies. Sometimes, debate can seem disconnected from reality, and it shouldn't be.
Cindi Timmons
Greenhill School
Last changed on
Tue January 9, 2024 at 10:26 AM CDT
I have been involved with debate as a participant, judge, school coach, national team coach, and UDL Executive Director. I have coached multiple state and national championships in the following events: Congress, LD, Policy, and World Schools Debate; Extemporaneous and Impromptu Speaking; and Prose/Poetry/Program of Oral Interpretation. I coached the 2023 WSDC World Champions as well.
I believe that speech and debate provides transformative life skills and that my role in the round is adjudicator/educator.
All speeches should be communicative in delivery, persuasive in style, and adhere to ethical standards in every aspect. Respect should be displayed to all involved, at all times.
In a competitive space, your role as a speaker/performer is to persuade me that your arguments/reasoning/evidence/performance is more compelling than the other competitors in the round. I will endeavor to base my decision on what happens IN the round and what I write on my flow, but I don't leave my brain at the door. Act accordingly.
I currently judge more WS rounds than anything else. WSDC/NSDA/TSDA norms should be adhered to. Speaking should be conversational as regards speed/style. Refutation may be line-by-line or utilize grouping, but you need to be clear where you are on the flow. Weighing is key. Stick to the heart of the motion and avoid the extremes. Unless the motion is US-specific you should provide international examples. Make it clear what your side of the debate looks like: what does the world of the Prop look like? the Opp? Framing/definitions/models should be fair and in the middle of the motion. Stakeholders should be clear; put a face on the motion.
A good debate round is a thing of beauty; respect your craft, the event, and your fellow competitors.
Cynthia Timmons
Greenhill School
Last changed on
Tue January 9, 2024 at 10:26 AM CDT
I have been involved with debate as a participant, judge, school coach, national team coach, and UDL Executive Director. I have coached multiple state and national championships in the following events: Congress, LD, Policy, and World Schools Debate; Extemporaneous and Impromptu Speaking; and Prose/Poetry/Program of Oral Interpretation. I coached the 2023 WSDC World Champions as well.
I believe that speech and debate provides transformative life skills and that my role in the round is adjudicator/educator.
All speeches should be communicative in delivery, persuasive in style, and adhere to ethical standards in every aspect. Respect should be displayed to all involved, at all times.
In a competitive space, your role as a speaker/performer is to persuade me that your arguments/reasoning/evidence/performance is more compelling than the other competitors in the round. I will endeavor to base my decision on what happens IN the round and what I write on my flow, but I don't leave my brain at the door. Act accordingly.
I currently judge more WS rounds than anything else. WSDC/NSDA/TSDA norms should be adhered to. Speaking should be conversational as regards speed/style. Refutation may be line-by-line or utilize grouping, but you need to be clear where you are on the flow. Weighing is key. Stick to the heart of the motion and avoid the extremes. Unless the motion is US-specific you should provide international examples. Make it clear what your side of the debate looks like: what does the world of the Prop look like? the Opp? Framing/definitions/models should be fair and in the middle of the motion. Stakeholders should be clear; put a face on the motion.
A good debate round is a thing of beauty; respect your craft, the event, and your fellow competitors.
Sal Tinajero Jr.
McFadden Intermediate
None
Esther Tomcykoski
NSU University School Middle
None
Carl Trigilio
Esqueda Elementary
None
Jui Trivedi
McQuaid Jesuit
None
Kiko Tumpalan
Hire
8 rounds
Last changed on
Mon September 9, 2019 at 5:23 PM EDT
Columbus High '19 and University of Georgia '23. I've done speech all four years, having success both on the local and national circuit, qualifying to both TOC and NSDA Nationals.
Though I did speech, I understand how PF flows at a general level.
Some ground rules:
1. I can handle speed just fine. However, if the argument you're trying to make is really important, slow down so it leaves more of an impact. The quality of your words is more important than the quantity.
2. Though I will be flowing, I am more on the lay side when it comes to tech. If you use terminology that I don't understand, then I will probably make a face and put it aside. If you see this, fix it by explaining it in a more "lay" fashion.
3. Everything said in Final Focus, MUST BE in Summary. Any new arguments brought up in FF that was not said in Summary will not be weighed.
4. In Summary, give me clear voters on why you won this debate. Make my job easier by explicitly telling me what should be weighed the most in the round. Fail to do this and it will be harder for you to win my ballot.
5. It's fine to be assertive, being rude isn't.
6. Puns are great. However, any discriminatory remarks made will result in a 22 for speaks and a good ol' talking to with your coach.
7. Time yourselves. I'm lazy.
8. I will make mistakes, and if I do, my b.
If you have a question or anything like that, don't be scared to ask me. I'm a pretty chill dude.
Amruta Vadnerkar
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Bruce Vassantachart
Ernest Lawrence Middle School
None
Dorothy* Vassantachart*
Hire
None
Sowjanya Velchala
Pike School
None
Bettina Vidal
Bak Middle School of the Arts
None
Jacques Voltaire
Ramblewood Middle School
None
Tiffiny Vuong
Sierra Preparatory Academy
None
Saudamini Wadwekar
Phoenix Country Day School (Middle)
8 rounds
None
Molly Wancewicz
The Harker Middle School
Last changed on
Tue February 9, 2021 at 5:53 AM EDT
Harker 2013-2017 (debated policy all 4 years, 2A for the last 3 years). Currently a senior at Rice University (not debating).
Updated before ASU 2021 to gear my paradigm more towards LD now that I rarely judge policy.
please put me on the email chain - molly dot wancewicz at gmail dot com
Online Debate:
I'll say clear once if I can't hear you but not beyond that because I don't want to miss even more of what you're saying. Record all of your speeches locally - if there's some kind of error/issue I will listen to the recording but will not allow you to re-give or re-do your speech. It would be excellent if you could have your camera on during the entire debate (at least CX and prep!) but I know everyone has different situations so if you can't/don't, I won't hold it against you. Please no prep stealing or other shenanigans that take advantage of online debate.
Arguments:
I think LD = short policy.
Theory - I have a higher threshold than most judges for voting on theory. I am not interested in hearing you throw out a bunch of random theory shells and see what sticks. There needs to be significant in-round abuse for me to vote on theory. Not wanting to engage with the aff is not the same thing as abuse. My threshold for abuse is probably slightly lower for cheating counterplans like consult, add-a-condition, object fiat, etc. I will literally never vote on an RVI.
Phil - I am not a good judge for a phil debate. I evaluate debates using the offense-defense paradigm, so I will be a much more effective judge if you read your argument as a kritik with an alt, or even as a DA, rather than as a traditionally-structured NC. At bare minimum you need to explain how your NC means that I should evaluate the debate and its offensive implications but I will be unhappy.
Framework - I default to util unless told otherwise.
Negative Strategy - Splitting the 2NR is almost never a good idea. Will definitely affect speaker points.
DAs and Case - I will be really really happy if this is the debate I'm judging :) Everything is fair game - politics and spinoffs, elections, topic-specific DAs, etc. Technical case vs. DA debates are great and proficiency here will have a significant positive impact on speaker points. I have a higher threshold on voting for neg arguments that aren't contextualized to the aff.
Nontopical affs - I will admit that I'm neg-leaning in the nontopical aff (k aff) vs. topicality (framework) debates. I find topical version of the aff arguments very persuasive. Fairness is a less compelling topicality/framework argument to me, but I would still vote on it as a net benefit to the TVA. I think k affs need to have an advocacy of some sort and be related to the topic.
Kritiks - I am reasonably familiar with the basics (security, cap, colonialism, etc) and a lot of identity arguments. I am much less familiar with high theory/postmodern stuff. Regardless of the author, though, contextualization to the aff is extremely important to me in the kritik debate - at the very least, the 1NC should include one specific link card. I find generic kritiks that aren't contextualized very unpersuasive. I think most k alts are implausible/prohibitively vague and/or don't solve the link - I find CX pressing the plausibility and details of the alt really effective. In addition, I am often very willing to vote on case outweighs and/or case solves the K given that these arguments are well-explained in the 2AR.
Counterplans - Need to have a solvency advocate. I like specific counterplans and I think DA+CP is a great 2nr, but I'm not a fan of cheating CPs (see theory) and I'm pretty aff-leaning on the theory question for these.
Topicality (vs policy affs) - I’m willing to vote on T. Even if your violation is bad, I’ll vote on tech in the T debate (within reason obviously)
Don't be rude - If you're mean to your opponent or partner (if applicable) your speaker points will reflect that.
If I happen to be judging PF:
Impact comparison is really important at the end of the debate - please don't make me do it for you.
Rachel Warnecke
St Mary's Hall
None
Willie Washington
Community Home Education Program
None
David Weatherly
Lakewood Speech & Debate
None
Jaclyn Weber
Sierra Preparatory Academy
None
Tori Wellman
Raymore-Peculiar East Middle School
None
Betty Whitlock
Academy ISD
None
Amy Wildman
Laurel Christian Middle
None
Ashley Wilson
Lakewood Speech & Debate
None
Gregory Wilson
Milton Academy Middle
None
Monica Winn
Hire
8 rounds
None
Johanne Kristine Wolf
DanDan Middle School
8 rounds
None
Anna Woodring
Bowling Green Jr. High School
None
David Yang
Golden Elementary School (MS)
None
La Sondria Young
Westpine Middle School
None
Vanessa Young
Willard Intermediate
None