The biggest issue facing the Tournament Debate Regime around the world is that they willfully exclude the educational perspective and also work to exclude educators from participating in the creation and administration of debate events.
The biggest shock during the pandemic is that debate tournaments continued, unimpeded through online means. There was no discussion and no questioning of whether or not the form of debate should alter in ways that take advantage of the online environment.
Instead, the tournament regime framed the situation as a loss, and worked out an extreme conservative solution which appears, at best, ridiculous. The speaking style of BP is inappropriate nearly anywhere in the world except an empty classroom on a weekend, but this is revealed even more plainly on Zoom.
An unavoidable principle of rhetoric is adaptation. One adapts to the context and the audience as an ethic. This ethic has at its aim to offer the perspective of the speaker in a way that allows for maximum access by those listening. But all of this is tossed by the tournament regime, whose entire goal has to be to determine who is going to win the context. There really must not be any other goal. Winning is good because it’s winning is the only operating principle that I can see from where I’m sitting.
A great way to understand this problem is through the process of how topics are chosen for tournaments. The values of novelty and shock are held above the values of reflection, reconsideration, and research.
I didn’t mean for there to be an alliteration there, but I’m happy it happened!
The people putting together debate topics and administering tournaments are competitively successful people. This is the root of their status in the debate world. They have to simultaneously be able to determine winners, create winners through coaching, and indicate they have a “special ability” in creating winning arguments. This last one is the root of topic framing problems.
The best way for a tournament regime member to prove this is to frame a ridiculous motion that 1) has never been set before and 2) involves a lot of complicated concepts that are marked as both intellectual and special.
The motives here are not educational, but professional. The motions are not designed to help others learn about argumentation and rhetoric, but help everyone realize why the motion setter has the position that they do. There’s no consideration for others and how to help others improve their understanding of how argument “works.” The attitude among the tournament regime is that education happens elsewhere (“they should know about this already” – by what standard?), that this prepares them for difficult “out rounds” (again, a reference to the motion setter’s glorious past victories and their specialized knowledge), and that we need reduction and clarity in order to declare a winner (quite literally the only thing that the tournament regime values in terms of the art of debating).
The pace and timing of the tournament also encourages this hard sports attitude to it rather than the values of education, which require time, conversation, reading, reflection, and production of texts in order to provide multiple points of assessment on whether someone is reaching understanding. All of this is dismissed in global debate; this is a test of your extant abilities and no more. And even that fails: The standards are non-existent for what those tests would be; one simply has to “be good” at debate to then have some ability to influence the content.
A more educational model of debating would not allow those who are competitively successful anywhere near the design of the event. The event should be designed around topics that are accessible, controversial, and allow for moments of reflection on the art of rhetoric, argumentation, and debate. Some of that will be lack of familiarity with various topic areas, of course. But that’s different than the tournament regime’s standard refrain: “They didn’t know about this?? Oh my God. . .”
The relationship between research, knowledge, and articulation is the value of participating in debate. This only happens through repetition, reflection, reiteration, and research (alliteration won’t leave me be today). These things are devalued in contemporary global debate because they do not serve the tournament regime’s goals: Determine winners clearly and efficiently over the course of 48 to 72 hours. It’s incredibly disappointing that the move to online debating due to the pandemic did not raise any reflective questions about the express or implicit goals of debate, the structure of the tournament as the monopoly method for participating in debate, or the innovations in speech and thought that could be included to make a more robust and interesting event.
Educators have the perspective of development, not the celebration of the developed. Debate programs struggle for support from Universities because they are obviously not related to the university project – the closest metaphor is sports. Sports programs at the university are celebrations of the “already good” people that can be recruited to play sports in the name of the university. This is the root of the tournament model, a form that is designed to quickly and efficiently determine who is best.
Compare this to the classroom or department at the university where students are taught the practice of how to determine and justify what should be best. The rubric is under inquiry at the same time as the matter for consideration. Debate, at least the rhetorical model of it, operates under the same principles. It is not truth-seeking; it is not fact-seeking – it is seeking what counts as fact and truth and understanding why those rubrics exist. To get a degree in literature, for example, is not just to understand what works of literature are best, but the genealogy of the determination as to what counts as the best in the first place. In comparison, tournament regime participants tend to believe the rules of determining who won a debate fell from the sky.
This involves covering and re-covering “old” issues as a principle of education. This doesn’t make for exciting debate contests, but it makes for exciting conversation about argument innovation and argument that can produce moments where we aren’t sure whether something is best. That question begging moment forces a return to the conversation about the rubric, which develops it. Without the attitude toward development, such moments are dismissed as “losing” arguments, and the tournament rolls forward. After all, there’s no reward for innovation if one wants to be invited to convene and create future tournament events. It’s a conservative operation of copying what previous winners have done in order to be in the position to indicate, through obscure novel motions, that they have special insight into how debate works. This perverse system means that the more debate you are successful at, the less reflection you engage in, and the more certain you can be about things you have very little experience or exposure to – mainly critical controversies around the globe.
Without the presence of education-minded people, tournament debate will be exactly what we don’t need: A system of events that give participants a way to show off what they already know, and judge others for what they don’t know. Without a practice of reconsideration and humility, tournament debate is not educational in a way that serves the creation of participants in democratic governance.
Comments
4 responses to “Competitive Debate is not in the Hands of Educators”
I was curious about how the world of comp debate was handling the pandemic. Would love to see a video of this over Zoom if they are available?
I do think there are some good nuggets of education with comp debate though that can be used for greater use other than WINNING. The idea of debating from first principles is one I feel definitely shaped the way I view the value of what I spent 4 years sweating over :p
Using principles as a source of invention is a remarkably powerful creative tool, I agree. The question is how many people can wash the tournament debate muck off of that nugget in order to hold onto it. Does it get washed away for most?
Imagine taking all the resources we spent on that and aiming them at the design of the core college curriculum. Invention from first principles as a concept in all required courses. That’s transformative education. No need to reserve it solely for a volunteer sports club!
Hey Steve,
Hope you are doing well my friend. Interesting post you have here. I think there are some important shards of truth in what you say here but I use the word shards because I think it is important to be careful where you step. Maybe not the best metaphor but I will explain. So probably this is directed at the university circuit and particularly at BP since that is the only format that I see mentioned in the post. So, I am not necessarily being argumentative, although I feel that would be acceptable if I was. But I do have to wonder if you are not committing the same foul that you describe by making such blanket statements? To say that there is/was NO questioning, NO discussion, NO reflection, NO consultation with educators, seems to me to be a bit of hyperbole. I know at least on the Schools level there was and still is much discussion, especially about equity in the activity. Also due to the fact that the pandemic and online debating coincided with the BLM protests and such, it seemed to gain synergy from both of these events. So I am wondering, from a rhetorical perspective, which you obviously are quite aware of, how do feel about that in this discussion? What is your intention in using these blanket statements and can it be counterproductive? Thanks
willing to learn,
Mark Webber
Good to hear from you Mark!
I am sure there’s some consultation with educators out there, but debate is not in their hands. Too often, debate is passed off to those most interested in it, and those people have a sports attitude toward it rather than the attitude of an educator. Black Lives Matter is a great way of thinking about the difference here: The protests on TV are a lot like the way people treat tournament debate: Intense, authentic, speaking truth, disruptive, etc. Whereas the side of Black Lives Matter that gets little to no attention would be the intensive sessions of dialogue and deliberation that occurred for days at the sit-in outside of Gracie Mansion/City Hall. That’s less thrilling, but a lot more of the productive elements of democracy are there. Tournament debate strips debate of its most powerful democratic pedagogical elements.
Also you are right – mostly directed at BP and global debate, where the problem is at its worst. I’m certain that highly local, teacher controlled debate competitions and programs are quite pedagogically healthy. My concern is these are rare compared to the weekend warrior clubs, or where teaching someone how to excel at a tournament equivocates with the pedagogy of debate within a democratic order.
Equity serves the tournament. The more diverse the tournament participants, the more the event looks legitimate, so I’m not surprised WSDA is focused there. What would be good for global debating organizations to focus on would be assessment: What can students do after participating in WSDA that their peers cannot? There was a very old longitudinal study on Schools debate in Hong Kong that had some dynamic results. I think this would be a better focus than equity, then compare those numbers to a curriculum based on debate. The results would transform education. Debate is an incredibly vast radical pedagogical power source and most of the time it’s used to keep a beer fridge running. It’s like towing a 747 across the country in your cool sportscar. Why have tournaments at all? Where’s the innovation?
Thanks for reading and hope all is well in Mexico City, if you still live there!