Computer Writing and Research Lab | University of Texas at Austin
Debating as an alternative to presentations
Submitted by boudreault on March 18, 2008 - 1:51pm.
day-to-day class activities | paper assignments
Last semester I decided to have students participate in in-class debates instead of having final presentations and it was fantastic. I know of a few other teachers doing this and reporting that this works really well. This is especially true when the variety of possible topics is limited (resulting in mind-numbingly tedious presentation days) and when time is limited (presentations often take three or four classes and debates can be done in two). The only problem with debating is that the students' presentation grades are a little more difficult to tally. There are lots of approaches to evaluating students based on collective performance. I'm posting this to share my approach. I've attached the format and rules that I handed out in class and the score sheets that the adjudicators used to evaluate the debators. This is a challenging but fun alternative to presentations. OVERVIEW: Students work in groups on the days leading up to the debates so they become familiar with all the arguments of the controversies. They also get to know the strengths and weaknesses of their team members. (And they end up working on their diplomacy skills.) FORMAT: Adjudicators are given about a minute to decide which question they'll ask following each rebuttal. Teams are given two minutes following each question and each response to a question to regroup and strategize. Very important. TEAMS: The teams that aren’t debating become the adjudicators for the other topic and score the other teams. In fact, the presentation grades are based on their judgments. SCORING AND GRADING: The adjudicators’ judgments and scoring directly determine the grade. Originally I was just going to take them into consideration, but in the end they were so tough and so thoughtful that it just made sense to include their judgments in the grading. Their comments were also useful because you can’t catch everything during the debates. I used the Toronto Debating Society page as a guide to rules, scoring, and general reference (http://www.debating.ca). (Go to Education: Adjudication Guide Reference.) They have a detailed page if you’re not familiar with debating rules. I adapted their score sheet into something that would work for teams of 4 or 5 (see attachments). Each student speaks once. The teams decide who makes the opening statement, the closing statement, answers questions or makes rebuttals. After having worked together to prepare, this is where knowing each other’s strengths and weaknesses comes in handy. Each student can receive as high as 25 points. The totals for each team are tallied. The averages of the adjudicators’ scores are tallied. Teams of 5 can score a total 150; teams of 4 can score a total of 125 (add 25 to bring the possible total up to 150 to even things out between debate topics). DEBATE QUESTIONS: If anyone else tries this, let me know how it works out for you. Or if you have suggestions or alternatives, post those too. thanks!Submitted by laurasmith on March 20, 2008 - 1:40pm.
This assignment does exactly what I was asking for (and more) in my post about showcasing. I like that it makes the content of student work public--and puts responsibility for evaluation on students. I think that a lot of comments about why we like showcasing would apply to this assignment too. And of course, it has the extra component of competition to up the ante, which would, I imagine, up the energy in those last couple weeks of class. |
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