September Wyatt Tournament
2015
—
KY/US
DEBATE Paradigm List
All Paradigms:
Show
Hide
Sharon Bidwell
Sacred Heart Academy
None
Brian Birch
Larry A Ryle High School
None
Lisa Edmonds
Larry A Ryle High School
Last changed on
Thu January 4, 2024 at 10:08 AM EDT
I do not like spreading, especially online as I have a hard time understanding what you are saying if you spread. Also, please try not to mumble as I am somewhat hard of hearing.
I do not like Ks. I do not know how to judge a competitor using one or any kind of progressive debate in LD.
Rachel Finefrock
Assumption High School
None
Brenda Freeman
Sacred Heart Academy
None
Tim Hanson
DuPont Manual High School
Last changed on
Fri February 10, 2017 at 8:59 AM EDT
Parent/lay judge. Spread at your own risk.
Niki Harrison
North Oldham High School
None
Janet Heston
Jeffersontown HS
None
Sirijun Mayi
Larry A Ryle High School
None
Rachel Page
Larry A Ryle High School
Last changed on
Wed January 3, 2024 at 5:19 AM EDT
I use she/her pronouns.
I have coached all forms of debate, with students as state champions, national qualifiers, and national outrounds (mainly in LD, but also CX, PFD, and congress). While I am a coach of 20+ years, I like to be treated as a lay judge. My philosophy is that regardless of the style of debate, you should never assume that your judge knows more than you and it is your responsibility to educate them on the topic. That means:
1) I prefer speech habits that emphasize persuasiveness and understanding. Don't spread, make sure to signpost, and think about how you can use your voice to emphasize key points.
2) Avoid topic-specific jargon. We are not researching this stuff to the level that you do as a competitor. Don't throw out an acronym without telling me what it stands for, unless it is a universally-known one (i.e. NATO). Sometimes even terms of art in the resolution aren't really known to the judge, so it is helpful to clarify. That also goes for complex ideas and theories.
3) Explain your arguments/contentions. Just reading card after card does not showcase your logic. Remember the warrant -- WHY does that evidence matter? And with that said, what is the impact? I love a good impact.
Raghwendra Pathak
DuPont Manual High School
Last changed on
Fri February 12, 2016 at 1:31 AM EDT
I like good argumentation and a slow pace. I am a parent judge, and I've judged tournaments before.
Felix Raj
DuPont Manual High School
Last changed on
Tue November 29, 2022 at 2:16 AM EDT
Parent volunteer judge with 3+ years. Primarily PF but have judged LD too. Speed is not an issue but if you spread, you are taking a risk.
Treating all debaters with respect is critical to me. Any demeaning behavior towards opponent will have a very negative impact on speaker points.
Stacking too many questions and not letting opponent respond will backfire you. What good is a cross-fire question if it does not expose opponent's weakness for the judge to observe ?
I like strong arguments - pro or con does not matter. I will never have an opinion about the topic - my judging record will speak for itself.... Good arguments will always get the win.
I prefer not to disclose results unless I have to. In ballots (both e-ballot and paper) my observations/thoughts/notes will have "**". When a sentence does not start with "**", that is the feedback.
Pedro Sanchez-Villa
Trinity High School
Last changed on
Tue January 16, 2024 at 5:12 AM EDT
If competitors are doing an email chain for evidence; Sanchez-villa@trinityrocks.com
Competed in the Louisville, Kentucky Circuit in high school for three years. Graduated with a major in Political Science from the University of Louisville. I am an assistant coach of Trinity High School for the Speech & Debate team and have held that role for four years now. I say this to highlight that I have years of experience in this event and am familiar with many debate styles, philosophies, frameworks and am aware of changing trends in the debate world, that being said Debate is an educational tool and a time for students to practice analytical thinking and persuasive skills in a unique environment unlike school, so please do not spread at a rate that is so fast that it can never be repeated in a public environment, dont go so fast that the only way to flow is off a speech doc because I will ignore it. Evidence calling is a new thing with the advent of technology post-covid but do not make the evidence calling period so long that it delays the debate and ends up being wasted, call for cards that matter to the judge, not your team. Great debate, for me, is one where both sides are understanding of what the other person's case is stating and evaluating and clashing at that crucial point. There are a lot of debates where people run past each others points and do not actually attack the meat of what is being debated causing me to weigh two worlds that have very little to differentiate from. Competitors should be critical of evidence (yes please do stake the round on thats not what your evidence says, and I will read evidence of contention if I believe there is merit to it not claiming what it means, bad card cutting happens to everyone) and claims being made and any connection that they do not make for me as a judge I will not flow. Make my decision for me with your final speech.
Michael Sharp
North Oldham High School
Last changed on
Wed August 13, 2014 at 6:16 PM EDT
Key Considerations:
- Substance of argument over style of argumentation is a primary metric by which I seek to appraise a round. There are many debate styles that may come and go in popularity, but the substance of an argument is central to all. Accomplish substance more thoroughly than your opponent and a win will be earned.
- Intelligent and Intelligible arguments are preferred. In other words, provide a clear thesis for which you are contending and make sure that you accomplish it in such a rate of delivery that can be followed/flowed in proper fashion.
- Strong development of argumentative framework, appropriate evidence, and proper linkage are all assets in a round.
- Healthy clash is encouraged so that each posited argument clearly claims its unique ground. Vigorous clash is welcomed as long as it is with clear respect for one's opponent.
- Special Note: A significant and primary task of a winning debate is to address the resolution, address the resolution, and address the resolution. Those who address the resolution will have a far better chance at earning a win than those who seek to address a matter that lies outside of the stated scope of a round. Specifically, one should be prepared to debate the chosen topic not a topic about the topic or of your preference.
Experience:
- I have debated in high school and college with primary experience in Policy and Lincoln Douglas styles. I have coached at the high school level for a number of years during my teaching tenure at North Oldham High School and strongly support the Wilson Wyatt Debate League philosophy of providing constructive reflection for debaters.
Leland Spencer
Middletown High School
None
Russ Wallace
Assumption High School
None
Spencer Zimmerman
Ballard High School
None