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  2. Point of information (competitive debate) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_of_information...

    In competitive debate, most commonly in the World Schools, Karl Popper, and British Parliamentary debate styles, a point of information (POI) is when a member of the team opposing that of the current speaker gets to briefly interrupt the current speaker, offering a POI in the form of a question. This may be as a correction, asking for clarity ...

  3. IB Group 1 subjects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IB_Group_1_subjects

    Written assignment (25 marks weighing 25% of the course) - Candidates submit a 1200 to 1500-word analytical literary essay on a topic generated by the candidate, based on a work studied in part 1. This is done in 4 stages - the interactive oral (journal writing for self-taught candidates), the reflective statement, topic development and the ...

  4. The Frank Anthony Memorial All-India Inter-School Debate

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Frank_Anthony_Memorial...

    The topic is only revealed to the students an hour before the actual debate by way of opening a sealed envelope in their presence. This ensures that no pre-written material can be used in the debate. Students are expected to speak for a total time period of four minutes which is followed by two minutes of questioning and rebuttals.

  5. Theory of knowledge (IB course) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_knowledge_(IB...

    Theory of Knowledge is a course created by the IB organization and must not be conceived as pure epistemology. This course involves a process of exploring and sharing students' views on "knowledge questions" (an umbrella term for "everything that can be approached from a TOK point of view"), so "there is no end to the valid questions that may arise", "there are many different ways to approach ...

  6. National Forensic Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Forensic_Association

    The National Forensic Association (NFA) is an American intercollegiate organization designed to promote excellence in individual events and debate. Founded in 1971, the NFA National Tournament is dedicated to a full range of literature interpretation, public address, limited preparation, and Lincoln-Douglas debate.

  7. World Schools Style debate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Schools_Style_debate

    World Schools Style debate (or WSS) is a debate format combining the British Parliamentary and Australia-Asian debating formats. Designed in 1988 to meet the needs of the World Schools Debating Championships tournament, it has become popular internationally as one of the main English high school debate formats. As an international format, the ...

  8. Inter-collegiate policy debate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-Collegiate_policy_debate

    Inter-collegiate and high school policy debate are largely similar. Some of the differences: High school debate has its own, separate, leagues and tournaments. High school constructives are typically only 8 minutes, and high school rebuttals are typically only 5 minutes. College times are typically 9 minute constructives and 6 minute rebuttals.

  9. Resolved (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolved_(film)

    Resolved is a 2007 documentary film concerning the world of high school policy debate. The film was written and directed by Greg Whiteley of New York Doll fame. [1] The film captured the "Audience Award" title at its debut on June 23, 2007 at the Los Angeles Film Festival. [2] The film was produced by One Potato Productions. [1]