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PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I

PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

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Page 1: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE

Debate I

Page 2: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

WHAT IS IT?

Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes called by its former names, controversy debates or Ted Turner debate, is a style of debate practiced in National Forensic League

Page 3: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

PFD• Public Forum Debate is audience

friendly debate that focuses on advocacy of a position derived from the issues presented in the resolution, not a prescribed set of burdens.

• A Public Forum Debate round begins with a flip of a coin between the competing teams to determine sides and speaker position.

• Public Forum tests skills in argumentation, cross-examination, and refutation.

Page 4: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

INTRODUCTION• Public Forum Debate offers students a unique

opportunity to develop on-their-feet critical thinking skills by situating them in contexts not unlike US political (radio and TV) talk shows. Public Forum debaters must anticipate numerous contingencies (possibilities) in planning their cases, and must learn to adapt to rapidly changing circumstances as discussions progress.

• Public Forum’s open-ended cross-examination format encourages the development of unique rhetorical strategies. Public Forum debates should be transparent to lay audiences while providing students with real-world public speaking skills through the discussion of contentious ideas.

Page 5: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Public Forum Debate

• Public Forum will test your skills in argumentation, cross-examination, and refutation.

Example• Current PF Topic: Resolved:

The benefits of post 9/11 security measures outweigh the harms to personal freedom.

Page 6: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

How it goes…

• Two teams make up a Public Forum debate, one taking the affirmative position, the other arguing the negative. The guidelines for arguing these positions are as follows:

1. Arguing a Case for the Resolution

The affirmative team has the opportunity to interpret and define the resolution, and has the responsibility to interpret the resolution as it would reasonably be interpreted in the public sphere. The affirmative team is not required to provide a literal interpretation of the resolution, but may instead choose to create a metaphorical interpretation of the resolution. The reasonability of the affirmative team’s interpretation of the resolution is a matter that can be argued from debate to debate.

Page 7: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

How it goes…• 2. Arguing Against the Resolution

Assuming that the affirmative team’s interpretation of the resolution is acceptable, the objective of the negative team’s efforts is to refute the arguments offered by the affirmative team and/or to offer its own arguments against the stance taken by the affirmative team.

The negative team may challenge any aspect of the affirmative team’s case. For instance, it may challenge the interpretation of the motion (if it is unreasonable), the factual and analytical foundations of the proposition’s case, the underlying assumptions of the proposition team’s claims, or any costs associated with the affirmative team’s arguments.

Page 8: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Public Forum Debate

• You and a partner will debate controversial issues that are taken from newspaper headlines.

• New topics will be announced for each month.

Page 9: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

This Debate Should…• -display solid logic, reasoning, and

analysis• -utilize evidence but not be driven by it• -present a clash of ideas• -counter the arguments of the

opponents (rebuttal)• -communicate ideas with clarity,

organization, eloquence, and• professional decorum

Page 10: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

RULES• 1. In-Round Research is Prohibited

Research on the topic must be completed prior to the beginning of an actual debate. Once the debate begins, the debaters may not conduct research via electronic or other means. No outside person can conduct research during the debate and provide it directly or indirectly to the debaters. The use of a dictionary to determine the meaning of English words that the debater may not understand should not be construed as a violation of this rule.

2. Citations

Debaters may refer to or cite any public information. When debaters cite information, they should be prepared to provide complete documentation of the source to the opposing team and to the judge on request. A team’s documentation of cited material must be complete enough that the opposing team and the judge can independently locate the information. Ordinarily, such documentation would include the name of an author (if any), the name and date of a publication, the URL of a website (if the information was retrieved electronically), and a page number (if any exists.)

Page 11: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

How It Goes• The debate begins with the first team's first four-

minute constructive speech. In this speech, one of the members of the team gives arguments either for or against the resolution (a resolution or topic is a a resolution or topic is a normative statement which the affirmative team normative statement which the affirmative team affirms and the negative team negatesaffirms and the negative team negates.), depending on which side the team is speaking for.

• Strictly speaking, the custom in public forum debate dictates that when debaters speak (both for speeches and crossfire), they should face forward towards the judge, sometimes from behind a lectern. However in some tournaments, it is customary for debaters to remain seated and face each other during crossfire.

Page 12: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

CLOSER LOOK @ First Two Speeches

• In these two speeches, the first and second speakers should deliver their pre-prepared reasons for adoption or rejection of the topic. The second speaker may also respond to the most important arguments raised by the first speaker.

• In the first two speeches, speakers for both sides must be concerned with constructing and presenting a logical argument that draws on evidentiary support. This is the one time in the debate where specific preparation can be used as a tool of the debate.

Page 13: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

How It Goes• Next, the other side is permitted to give its

first four-minute constructive speech in which not only arguments may be presented, but rebuttals to arguments from the first speech as well.

• However, rebuttals are almost always not presented until a team's second constructive, and are frowned upon in some states/tournaments, and the first constructive generally consists exclusively of prepared material.

Page 14: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Cross Fire• Following this speech, the first speaker from the first

team joins the first speaker from the second team at the podium if one is provided (in the absence of one debaters stand by their desks) and the first three-minute "crossfire" begins.

• The first speaker begins crossfire by asking a question to the second speaker. In crossfire, the two debaters directly ask each other questions and answer questions of their opponent.

• Crossfire may be used, like cross-examination, to ask revealing questions in an attempt to expose a weakness in the opponents' arguments, but it is often used as a way to further develop and attack arguments through discourse.

Page 15: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Keep Goin’

• After crossfire, first team's second speaker gives a four-minute rebuttal speech. After they have rebutted their opponents case, they move on to "rehab" their own (rebut the opponents rebuttals in an attempt to nullify them. Although, this only applies to the second speaker as the first team should not have had any points rebutted yet.)

• Then, the second speaker of the second team gives a four-minute constructive speech following this same format. Following this speech, another three-minute crossfire ensues.

Page 16: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

CLOSER LOOK @ 2nd SPEECHES

• This speaker position for both sides has the burden of analyzing the opponents’ position and explaining flaws in the ideas presented by the other team.

• The judge has an expectation that the two sides will clash. Clash may be in the form of line-by-line refutation of the opponent’s position or could focus on the most "attackable" issues advanced by the other side.

Page 17: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Grand Crossfire• The first speaker of the first team then gives a

two-minute summary speech of the debate, which includes further rebuttal of the opponents case and reiteration of the first team's case, and the first speaker of the second team does the same.

• After this speech, all four debaters participate in "Grand Crossfire". Grand Crossfire is similar to crossfire except that all four debaters can ask and answer questions of each other. The speaker that gave the first summary speech begins Grand Crossfire by asking the first question.

Page 18: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Final Focus• After Grand Crossfire, each team's second speaker

has a chance to give a one-minute speech called the "Final Focus," the first team giving this speech first.

• In the Final Focus, the speaker is given one last chance to explain exactly why his or her team has won the round. No new arguments or evidence is allowed in the Final Focus. This speech is often the determining factor for a judge's decision in a closely contested round, as it allows the judge to hear which arguments/evidence each team views as the most important to his or her case, and summarizes the entire debate.

Page 19: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

CLOSER LOOK @ FINAL FOCUS

• In the Final Focus, speakers should select the issue or issues they feel have become crucial to the round.

• Moreover, they should explain how their side has won arguments related to those issues. The Final Focus should not be an attempt to explain all issues that have been raised, but rather offer sustained, persuasive commentary on a single issue or small number of issues of importance.

Page 20: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

TOPICS

• April 2009: "Resolved: That the Employee Free Choice Act serves the best interests of the American people.“

• March 2009: "Resolved: That, on balance, the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 has improved academic achievement in the United States.“

• February 2009: "Resolved: That, on balance, the rise of Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRIC) has had a positive impact on the United States.“

• January 2009 "Resolved: That, by 2040, the federal government should mandate that all new passenger vehicles and light trucks sold in the United States be powered by alternative fuels.“

• December 2008: "Resolved: That, on balance, social networking Web sites have had a positive impact on the United States."

Page 21: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

TOPICS PT. 2• November 2008: "Resolved: That the United States

government should implement universal health care modeled after the French system.“

• October 2008: "Resolved: That the United States should

significantly increase its use of nuclear energy."

• September 2008: "Resolved: That the United States should implement a military draft."

• NFL Nationals: "Resolved: US policies established after September 11, 2001 have substantially reduced the risk of terrorist acts against the United States.“

• http://www.idebate.org/debatabase/topic_suggestions.php

Page 22: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Time Schedule• Public Forum Timing Schedule• First Speaker - Team A = 4 Minutes• First Speaker - Team B = 4 Minutes• Crossfire = 3 Minutes• Second Speaker - Team A = 4 Minutes• Second Speaker - Team B = 4 Minutes• Crossfire = 3 Minutes• Summary - First Speaker - Team A = 2 Minutes• Summary - First Speaker - Team B = 2 Minutes• Grand Crossfire = 3 Minutes• Final Focus - Second Speaker - Team A = 1 Minute• Final Focus - Second Speaker - Team B = 1 Minute• Prep Time (per team) = 2 Minutes 

Page 23: PUBLIC FORUM DEBATE Debate I. WHAT IS IT? Public forum debate, also known as crossfire debate, PFD (sometimes pronounced puff), pofo, pufo, and sometimes

Everyone is expected to be a respectful audience

member. A judge’s rank may

reflect a contestant’s disrespect to other

competitors during the round.