🎉 New Courses Now Live ! Explore the latest courses added across Debate, Critical Thinking, and Global Readiness.
World Schools Debate involves:
The teams are:
Each speaker performs a specific role within the broader team strategy.
This is one of the major educational strengths of World Schools:
students learn that debate is not merely individual speaking, but collaborative intellectual teamwork.
Unlike formats where speakers operate more independently, World Schools requires teams to build:
The standard order of speeches is:
Each speech usually lasts:
The First Proposition speaker begins the debate by:
This speech is critically important because it establishes:
The First Opposition speaker responds immediately by:
Strong first speakers create strategic clarity for the rest of the round.
Weak first speeches often create confusion that damages the entire team later.
Second speakers are often considered the “engine room” of World Schools Debate because they carry enormous analytical responsibility.
Their job includes:
Many judges believe second speakers frequently determine the intellectual quality of the round because this is where debates move beyond setup and into serious analytical engagement.
Strong second speakers:
This role teaches students one of debate’s most valuable skills:
the ability to think clearly while actively responding to challenge.
Third speakers do not usually introduce major new arguments.
Instead, they focus primarily on:
The third speaker’s responsibility is to explain:
This role requires very high-level listening and organization skills.
Strong third speakers often sound less like presenters and more like analysts carefully guiding judges through the debate.
Reply speeches are among the most unique features of World Schools Debate.
They are not simply shorter speeches.
A reply speech functions almost like:
Reply speakers explain:
Importantly:
reply speeches cannot introduce entirely new substantive arguments.
Their purpose is synthesis, not expansion.
The strongest reply speeches simplify complicated debates elegantly and help judges understand the round clearly.
One of the defining characteristics of World Schools Debate is the balance between prepared and impromptu debating.
Prepared motions are released before tournaments, often weeks in advance.
Teams:
Prepared debating rewards:
Impromptu motions are revealed shortly before the debate, usually with:
This creates a completely different intellectual challenge.
Students must rely on:
Many students initially fear impromptu rounds, but they often become some of the most exciting and educational debates because they reveal genuine analytical thinking rather than memorized preparation.
World Schools adjudication traditionally evaluates speakers through three broad categories:
The quality of arguments and analysis.
This includes:
The delivery and communication style of the speaker.
This includes:
Importantly, manner is not about theatrical performance alone. Judges reward communication that strengthens argumentation rather than distracting from it.
The organization and strategic structure of speeches.
This includes:
Strong method makes debates easier for judges to follow and evaluate.
World Schools Debate is widely respected because it develops multiple skills simultaneously:
The format teaches students not merely how to speak, but how to:
For this reason, many schools worldwide use World Schools as their primary training format before introducing students to more specialized styles later.