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Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

Mar 27, 2015

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Antonio Flood
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Page 1: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

adjudication briefing

Page 2: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

adjudication briefing

• format of tournament

• rules

• practicalities

Page 3: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

tournament format

• 9 rounds

• round 1 is randomly drawn

• rounds 2-9 are power matched

• top 32 teams break through to knockout

rounds

• esl break – top 8 esl teams outside top 32

Page 4: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

points to note

• judging conflicts (e.g. will not judge own

team)

• consensus decisions among the panel

• oral adjudications in rounds 1-6

• closed adjudications rounds 7-9

• adjudicator accreditation (tests, feedback &

experience)

• adjudicator break (judges for the knockouts)

Page 5: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

rulesJudges should be familiar with the Worlds

rules

• points of information

• definitions

• matter – the content of a speech

• manner – the structure and style of a speech

• the role of different teams in the debate

• marking scheme

Page 6: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

positions in the debate

1. prime minister 2. leader of opposition

3. deputy prime 4. deputy leader of

minister opposition

5. member of govt 6. member of opp.

7. govt whip 7. opposition whip

Page 7: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

basic format

• 15 minutes preparation time

• printed or written material

permitted

• electronic equipment prohibited

• 7 minute speeches

Page 8: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

points of information

• first and last minutes of speech are protected

• time signal to indicate these points

• member offering POI should stand

• speaker may accept or decline

Page 9: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

points of information

• POIs should not exceed 15 seconds

• the speaker may ask the offering member to sit where the offeror has had a reasonable chance to be understood

• members should attempt to answer at least 2 POIs in their speech

• there are no “points of order” or “points of personal privilege”

Page 10: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

points of information

• may take any form the offeror wishes

• questions, clarification, facts, challenges, rebuttal, even jokes

• POIs assessed as “matter”

Page 11: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

assessing points of information

• effectiveness and persuasiveness

• member offering point of information

• speaker answering point of information

• participation in debate as a whole

Page 12: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

motions

• open motions

e.g. “this house believes the glass is half

full”

• semi-closed motions

e.g. “this house would alter its genetic

code”

• closed motions

e.g. “this house would bomb Iraq”

Page 13: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

definitions

• the definition should state the issue(s)

for debate arising from the motion,

stating the meaning of any terms in

the motion which require

interpretation

• PM should provide the definition at

the beginning of his/her speech

Page 14: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

definitions

• the definition must:

(a) have a clear and logical link to

the motion

(b) not be self-proving /truistic

(c) not be time-set

(d) not be place-set unfairly

Page 15: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

(a) “clear and logical link”

• average reasonable person would accept the link between motion and definition as explained by the speaker

• semi-closed motions: treat the motion as an issue for debate

e.g. “this house would alter its genetic code”

• closed motions: take stricter approach

e.g. “this house would bomb Iraq”

Page 16: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

(b) self-proving definitions

• x should / should not be done, and there is no reasonable rebuttale.g. “we’re going to argue that murder should be illegal”

• x is already the case, and so there is no reasonable rebuttale.g. “we’re going to argue that the murder rate in the US is higher than in Scotland”

Page 17: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

(b) self-proving definitions

• “status quo” cases are not necessarily unreasonable

e.g. “we’re going to argue that the european union should adopt the single currency”

• it’s a fair definition, because there is a reasonable rebuttal

Page 18: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

(c) time setting

• “...it’s 1936. You’re about to be introduced to Adolf Hitler, you’ve got a gun in your pocket, and you’re not particularly pleased to see him. We’re going to argue that you should shoot him and save millions of lives...”

• all debates must take place in the present

Page 19: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

(d) unfair place setting

• the members should debate the motion in the spirit of the motion and the tournament

• have regard to the issue being debated

• have regard to the teams in the debate

Page 20: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

definitional challenges

• the leader of the opposition may challenge the definition if it violates one of the four criteria above and he should clearly state that he’s doing so.

• only the leader of the opposition may challenge the definition – no-one else

• the leader of the opposition should substitute an alternative definition

Page 21: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

assessing definitional challenges

• the adjudicator should determine the definition to be “unreasonable” where it violates any of the criteria above

• the onus to establish that the definition is unreasonable is on the members challenging it.

• where the definition is unreasonable, the opposition should substitute an alternative definition that should be accepted by the adjudicator provided it is not also unreasonable.

Page 22: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

assessing definitional challenges

• where an alternative definition is

substituted by the opening

opposition, the closing

government may accept that

definition and introduce matter

which is inconsistent with the

opening government’s matter.

Page 23: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

matter

• matter is the content of a speech

• matter includes arguments and

reasoning, examples, case studies,

facts and any other material that

attempts to further the case

• matter includes points of

information

Page 24: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

the elements of matter

• matter should be:

• relevant to the debate• logical• consistent – within their

speech, with their partner, and also with the other team on their side of the debate

Page 25: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

the elements of matter

• all members (except the last two in the debate) should present positive matter

• the govt whip may choose to do so• the opp whip may not do so

• all members (except the prime minister) should present rebuttal

Page 26: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

assessing matter

• matter should be persuasive

• adopt the viewpoint of an “average reasonable person” – disregard any specialist knowledge you may have

• Judge should not allow bias or discrimination to influence their decision

Page 27: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

manner

• manner is the presentation of the speech

• style

• structure

Page 28: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

style

• any element which affects the overall effectiveness of the speaker’s presentation

• eye contact• voice modulation• hand gestures• clarity of language and

expression• use of notes

Page 29: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

structure

• structure of the speech should:

• include an introduction, conclusion, and a series of arguments

• use the allotted time properly

• teamwork

Page 30: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

assessing manner

• overall effectiveness of presentation

• at a world championship, there are many styles which are appropriate, and you should not discriminate against a speaker simply because their manner would be considered “inappropriate” in your own country

Page 31: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

the role of teams in the debate

• 1st govt:– definition– justification of case– rebuttal of 1st opp (deputy prime

minister)

• 1st opposition:– rebuttal– alternative where appropriate

Page 32: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

the role of teams in the debate

• 2nd govt– anything which makes them

stand out from the debate

– job is simply to “be better” than 1st govt

– how does a team do this?

Page 33: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

the role of teams in the debate

• 2nd govt

– introduce new material consistent with 1st govt

– e.g. new lines of argument– e.g. different focus to the case– e.g. widening / narrowing of debate– repetition of 1st govt isn’t enough

Page 34: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

summary speeches

• Summary of debate as a whole, with particular emphasis on own team

• responsive to dynamics of debate -spend more time on the more important issues

• no one correct way of doing this– speaker by speaker– issue by issue– thematic

Page 35: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

ranking teams

• rank teams from 1st to 4th (Note: judges MUST fill out their ballots 1st, 2nd,

3rd, 4th and the tab system will convert into the 3, 2, 1, 0 point for ranking. If the ballot is incorrectly filled out then there is a danger that the wrong result will be entered)

• teams may be placed last automatically, where they fail to arrive more than 5 minutes after the scheduled time for the debate

Page 36: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

marking scheme

A 90-100 excellent to flawless the standard of speech you would expect to see from a speaker at the semifinal / grand final level of the tournament. this speaker has few, if any, weaknesses.

B 80-89 above average to very good the standard you would expect to see from a speaker in contention to make the break. this speaker has clear strengths and some minor weaknesses.

Page 37: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

marking scheme

C 70-79 average the speaker has strengths and weaknesses in roughly equal proportions.D 60-69 poor to below average the speaker has clear problems and some minor strengths.E 50-59 very poor the speaker has fundamental weaknesses and few, if any, strengths.

Page 38: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

practicalities

• consensus decision making

• speed ballot (must be filled in ASAP)

• detail ballot (One per room not one per judge)

• oral adjudications (given by the chair judge unless dissenting)

Page 39: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

agreeing rankings and scores

• agree team rankings 1st – 4th

• Fill in and return the Speed ballot to a

runner outside your room

• award individual speaker marks (this is

done by concensus and ONE form is

returned. This is a change from past

Worlds and was first done in Toronto

• no “low point wins” i.e the team that finishes first

must get more speaker marks than the team in second and so on

Page 40: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

agreeing rankings and scores

• agree rankings and scores by consensus. Where unanimous consensus cannot be reached the judges vote.

• The Chair judge does NOT have the right to over-ride the majority decision if he/she is dissenting

• You must make a decision. Where all judges are deadlocked in different opinions and no majority can be reached then, and only then, may the chair make an over-riding decision

Page 41: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

oral adjudications

• ballots go in before you start

• chair of panel (unless dissenting)

• announce team rankings

• reasons behind decision

• constructive criticism

• don’t exceed 10 minutes

Page 42: Adjudication briefing. format of tournament rules practicalities.

feedback and complaints

• oral adjudication

• queries and clarification

– “polite and non-confrontational”

• adjudicator evaluation form

• adjudication team

• all complaints will be followed up