How to be a good judge of parliamentary debate?

This is the quick-and-dirty guide to judging parliamentary debate if you’ve never done it before. It’s not as hard as it sounds. This guide has everything you absolutely must know to be a respectable judge. The basics You should hang out in the General Assembly between debate rounds.

How does a judge Judge a school debate?

This highly interactive style of debate allows debaters to engage each other, even during speeches. This challenging format requires good teamwork and in-depth quality argumentation. The judge will fill in the sides and speaker information in the appropriate spaces on the ballot.

When do you hang out between debate rounds?

The basics You should hang out in the General Assembly between debate rounds. Fifteen minutes before a round, the Judging Director will do a roll call to find out which judges are present. A few minutes later, someone will read a list of debate pairings. For each pairing, there will be two teams, a judge, and a room.

How are motions debated in World Schools Debate?

The motions debated in the world schools debate are either motions or propositions of value or policy. A proposition of value will ask debaters to qualify if the topic of the motion is; good or bad, or has done more harm than good, or is better than some other alternative.

What’s the difference between BP and BP debate?

There are many different styles of debating around the world – US Parliamentary, Australs, even the Dutch do it differently – but the one that concerns us here is British Parliamentary Debating, or BP, for short. This is the standard form used at university level and differs radically from the schools style to which some young debaters are used.

How many speakers are in a BP debate?

This is the standard form used at university level and differs radically from the schools style to which some young debaters are used. BP debates consist of four teams of two speakers each, broken down as follows: !1stProposition (sometimes called 1stGovernment) !1stOpposition !2ndProposition (or Government)