Debate
Comprehensive notes, formulas, and practice questions for Debate.
Debate
Debate
What you'll learn
- How debate writing presents a motion with structured arguments, rebuttal, and formal etiquette.
- To build FOR/AGAINST cases with definition of terms, contentions, and evidence.
- To anticipate opposition points and refute them without personal attack.
- To follow Class 11 debate formats — Asian Parliamentary basics and school motion practice.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Foundations
Verbal: A debate speech defends or attacks a motion ("This house believes social media harms teen mental health") within role and time limits.
Structure (typical school format):
- Greeting + stance — "I speak FOR the motion."
- Define key terms — narrow scope fairly.
- Arguments — 2–3 contentions with evidence/examples.
- Rebuttal — knock down expected opposite case.
- Summary — why your side wins on balance.
Argument quality (ARE):
- Assertion — claim
- Reasoning — because…
- Evidence — example, stat, analogy
Level 2 — Exam depth
Rebuttal types: Turn ("Their point actually helps us…"), Refute fact ("Outdated statistic"), Refute logic ("Correlation ≠ causation").
Fallacies to avoid: Ad hominem, straw man, false dilemma — judges penalise these.
POI (Points of Information): In parliamentary debate, accept selectively; in written school tasks, address one strong counter-argument in dedicated paragraph.
Definition battles: Winning narrow definition can win debate — define terms charitably but favour your case ("social media" = platforms teens use daily, not all internet).
Closing: Weigh arguments — "Even if they show benefit X, harm Y outweighs on scale and permanence."
Worked example
Draft FOR contention with rebuttal
Motion: Homework should be banned.
Contention 1: Excess homework steals sleep — linked to health harms (evidence: sleep hours vs load studies cited in school reports).
Rebuttal prep: Opposition says homework builds discipline → Reply: Structured in-class tasks build discipline without 3 hr nightly load; quality over quantity.
Summary: Balance wellbeing and learning — ban **excessive** homework policy our side proposes.
Define motion terms fairly
Motion: Online learning is better than classroom learning.
Define: "Online learning" = scheduled live classes with assessments, not random YouTube. "Better" = better average learning outcomes for **most** students in **typical** Indian urban schools.
Fair definition avoids straw-man of empty online videos.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Attacking speaker not argument | Emotional debate | Target claim, cite reason |
| No defined terms | Assumes shared meaning | Define motion in opening |
| Listing without reasoning | Bullet dump | Use ARE per contention |
| Ignoring strongest counterpoint | Cherry-picks weak opposition | Dedicated rebuttal paragraph |
Quick check
- Motion: "School uniforms should be compulsory." Write one FOR assertion with reason.
- Difference between rebuttal and new argument?
- Name two logical fallacies debaters must avoid.
- Stretch: Write 30-second summary closing FOR a motion of your choice.
Revision tip: Revisit adjacent topics in Creative Writing before mixed practice on Debate.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Debate.
Exam strategy
Spend two minutes defining the motion's key terms narrowly but fairly — definitional wins are legitimate at school level. Allocate equal time to two contentions plus one rebuttal paragraph addressing the strongest opposite point. Avoid scoring cheap points; judges reward clash on the central mechanism of the motion. End with weighing language: "On balance, harms outweigh benefits because…"
Practice connections
Debate structure mirrors argument analysis in reverse — you construct what verbal reasoning dissected. Speech skills supply delivery; debate adds clash and rebuttal. Literature themes supply motion ideas ("This house believes the protagonist's silence is complicit"). Formal proposal closings reuse debate weighing language ("On balance…"). Record rebuttal paragraph alone and check for fallacies using validity notes.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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