Protecting All of the Children in the Auditorium by Jonathan Alston, Anthony Berryhill, and Aaron Timmons

Editor’s Note: In light of the arguments made in this article, we are open to suggestions about concrete changes to our commenting policy. Please send suggestions to help@victorybriefs.com or write them in a comment. To read and sign the authors’ pledge for online civility in the debate community, please click here.

The Need to Create Online Community Norms in Contemporary Lincoln-Douglas Debate

“Close the doors!” Richard Sodikow would bellow across the auditorium at the top of his lungs. His voice rang through the enormous room and his order was immediately followed. The doors would be closed and the hundreds of high school students who attended the prestigious fall debate tournament at the Bronx High School of Science would be locked in, together. The fire alarm would sound, but we would not leave. We did not have to. We were already protected. The alarm was for the people outside of Richard’s purview. The children around him—high school students who came from across the United States to compete in academic debate—did not have to worry. The race, class, or gender of the debaters did not matter. We were all inside, together. Protected by the adult who took responsibility for our care.

That type of care, that type of concern for all children is missing from contemporary Lincoln-Douglas debate. Our community stands idly by while certain children, coaches, judges and programs are blatantly bullied online by institutions the debate community actively supports. While the research on the bystander effect is over 50 years old, the internet and social media has exacerbated the extent, and the impact, of inaction on online mediums. Professor Vincent Hendricks explains the 21st century bystander effect when he elucidated:

The bystander effect occurs because people observe each other before assisting. And the more people observing each other the stronger the signal that help is neither required nor appropriate. Once you take such public signals to social media in terms of, say, aggregated likes, you may just reinforce bystander behavior even more.

In the case of cyberbullying, by innocently “liking” you may be part of movement to establish a strong public signal about what the correct collective response is. You register your “like” with no obligation to actually intervene and non-intervention may just become the norm. (Hendricks)

High school debate, a uniquely educational and academic activity fostering the promotion of civil discourse, ought to reflect the basic principle that children — of all races, classes, genders, sexual orientations — are sacrosanct, and that their participation should be encouraged. The circuit Lincoln-Douglas virtual community, however, has proven that despite our focus on philosophy and morality in debate rounds, we are willing to watch some children be slaughtered online.

In this note we highlight the importance of a fully inclusive debate space, warning that the community’s reluctance to create virtual norms and its refusal to speak out against often racist, always destructive online bullying endangers not only the few students and programs who are publicly sacrificed, but that this unchallenged online behavior threatens the legitimacy of our activity as a whole. One or more of the authors were directly involved in many of the incidents described in this essay.

I: The Sacrifices: Instances of Online Bullying Promoted by Popular Debate Websites

Consider the following incidents. They are, unfortunately, not hypothetical and have been written and/or verified by the student victims described.

Example 1

An appeal is made to the tournament directors to include a team in the playoffs (Tournament of Champions) based on the claims that there were improprieties in how the qualifying tournaments and results were potentially corrupt or at least, not executed according to basic guidelines of appropriateness and had impacted that student’s ability to do as well as possible. Other students, judges and even coaches suggest that: 1) the student and his coaches are wrong to question such improprieties and that 2) the coaches are abusing their power by making such an appeal.

Subsequent online discussion by other coaches, potential judges and student competitors demonstrated little concern for either the accuracy of their claims or the psychological trauma caused to the student under discussion. When one debate website took down a conversation because of potential concerns of defamation/legal concerns, other popular debate websites re-posted the entire conversation and continued the defamatory online hostility.

In addition, this sixteen-year-old student’s confidential application to the Tournament of Champions was leaked to the discussion boards for further bullying. The anonymous (unauthorized) person who leaked the application, in a shocking display of dishonesty, also edited it to remove information that was favorable to the application, such as the list of several TOC qualified people defeated by the harassed student.

The student at the center of this flame war recently wrote about his experience:

There was nothing I could ever do to gain the respect of the community no matter how many rounds I won, what judges I picked up, what methods I used in round, my technical abilities or who I beat. Whenever I won rounds my senior year, people in the community widely shared their racist belief that, ‘The only way he wins rounds is because he’s black.’

However, what always upset me even more was that I felt that I never had any support or protection from adults in the community when I was being bullied and threatened online. Coaches were more worried about online debates and the technicalities of the TOC decision than my feelings.  Despite the fact that I was being told I wasn’t deserving and despite the fact I was sent inappropriate messages about my participation from judges in the TOC pool, coaches on other teams, summer camp instructors and competitors weeks before the TOC, no one cared. To this very day I think and ask why, outside of my circle of coaches and grandfather, were other coaches too afraid or unwilling to intervene?

It is important to note that the TOC Director had, based on their professional judgment, granted exceptions to allow students to apply or compete without the requisite number of bids based on extenuating circumstances. In the past couple of years students have competed, or asked to compete, at the TOC with situations that violated the “letter of the law” (in our opinion) as it applies to participation at the TOC. We didn’t see online vitriol. In fact, there was overwhelming support for allowing them to compete from some of the same folks protesting the above situation. While surprising to some, the inconsistency is not at all surprising to us.

Example 2

A student wins the prestigious Bronx High School of Science New York City Invitational in a highly competitive final round. Some of the judges and friends of competitors go online to a popular, respected debate website to disparage the student’s multiple identities and assert that her victory was strictly due to cheating. She writes of the experience:

The day after I won my first major, I was elated. I had deactivated Facebook for the year to concentrate on schoolwork and debate, so I checked my phone instead, expecting to see messages of congratulations from my friends and former instructors. Instead, I received a barrage of questions: “Have you been on NSD Update? Have you seen what they (coaches, students AND judges) are writing about you?

With a growing sense of dread, I logged on to NSD Update. I read through post after post written by debaters and coaches- adults, people I thought I could trust and respect- accusing me of cheating to win. At first, I felt confused. Of course I hadn’t cheated- I’d worked so hard to win. Why would anyone say that about me? Then I got angry, then embarrassed, and humiliated. It felt devastating. It felt awful.

Most of all, it felt unfair. I had worked so hard over the summer and in the few months leading up to the tournament. I spent every free period at school in the debate office drilling or writing cases. At home, I researched for hours until well past midnight. When I won, I felt like all of that work had been validated. But instead of celebrating my efforts, a large part of the community wanted to call me a cheater instead.

The day after I won my first major, I should have been overwhelmed with joy. Instead, I locked myself in my room and cried.

Perhaps the worst part of becoming the target of an online flame war was that the community turned against me. I used to love the debate community. Like many other young debaters, I considered it a place of refuge, a place where I could be myself. Now that I was ‘that girl who cheated,’ I couldn’t walk down a hallway at a tournament without receiving stares ranging from curious to hostile. Every so often I’d stumble across people talking about me in hushed tones, who invariably fell silent when I approached. I was made to feel awkward and uncomfortable almost everywhere I went, and that stigma stayed with me until I graduated.

There are other stories — too many other stories which we have personally witnessed. A judge in an elimination round of the Texas Forensic Association State Tournament last year was vilified online for his decision and accused of cheating. This judge was so concerned about the students he judged being humiliated by a respected debate website that he conflicted himself from judging them at subsequent tournaments. He did not want to risk a vote for them causing further humiliation and vilification.

The current use of LD debate discussion forums as a tool to attack students and their coaches is so violent and hostile that it is perhaps most accurate to say that students who put certain camps’ stickers on their laptops and bags are unwittingly flashing “gang signs of protection.” The saying “you can ride with us or you can collide with us,” has become a devastating reality for many.

Judges and coaches are human beings. When a judge knows that a vote against a particular student could make himself, his students or her program subject to online vilification and community attack, there is a perverse incentive to make a decision that does not reflect who he or she believes did the better debating. Even if that coach or judge is strong enough to resist the urge for self-preservation, the existence of such negative incentives is enough to destroy the integrity of debates.

A website responsible for the training of high school athletes would never be supported if it attacked players, referees and coaches. That many coaches feel that this state of affairs in debate is acceptable — as long as it benefits their “gang” — means that too many have lost sight of our primary duty to provide safe educational spaces for children.

II. Online Gangsters: The Dangerous Online Culture of National-Circuit Lincoln Douglas Debate and How this Online Culture Led to the Tournament of Champions’ Explosion of Entitlement 2014 (They Blew Up Round 7!)

Students feel safe in participating in harassment, judges feel safe in encouraging it, and coaches of influence feel safe in letting it happen.

Many of the people involved in this online vitriol would scream that our portrayal of them is unfair. They would say that they are the victims protecting the community from the corrupt abuse of power of long-term, entrenched coaches. In their view they are simply breaking down the barriers placed against them.

In their view, the “flame wars” they spark bring light to perceived wrongs in our community. If they don’t like the result of a decision in a final round, publically accusing the judges, coaches and students of cheating is the only way to right the perceived injustice. Pushing for “likes” to comments represents their equivalent of an online petition of support. Regardless of the lies they tell themselves, the truth remains: they do this because they feel a deep sense of entitlement which includes the “right” to debate wins, regardless of what happens in round.

To clarify, these flame wars must not be confused with official complaints to tournaments, genuine methods designed to promote reform, or scholarship which educates people about the art of debate. Instead, these online forums are used to gather a mob who can then share speculation and collectively “gear up” to initiate an online war against persons of color, women, and other marginalized populations.

If this online mob was actually genuine about caring about equality, fairness, and real competition, debaters and their coaches would focus their energy on being better at debate by reading more literature and improving their technique. But instead, they have focused their time and efforts on methods of intimidation to “defend their turf.”

As a result of such turf wars, the predominately Black, Hispanic, female or queer/quare victims of online flame wars have been placed in an impossible position. When someone posts something negative about her or him online it is the equivalent of an “online drive-by.” Their responses will not be interpreted or analyzed honestly because they are already judged as guilty before they have had the chance to respond. Even when the cascade of online accusations and threats end, other students and coaches permanently treat them with disdain and disrespect. In other words, online circuit LD debate forums have become the modern day version of “kangaroo courts,” in which even a (metaphorical) finding of innocence carries the same punishment as a conviction: victims suffer shunning, evil looks by competitors and judges and hostile treatment in-person at tournaments.

Much of what is occurring can be explained in literature rooted in social psychology on group dynamics.

One factor in spreading poison online is the ability to post comments anonymously. Arthur Schoepenhauer, over 160 years ago, created a phrase that could be applied to the “internet gangsters” of the 21st century when he stated: “Anonymity is the refuge for all literary and journalistic rascality” (Schoepenhauer). It has become a culture of “drive – by anonymity” (Lanier) where individuals can functionally create their vision of history that the reader, without context, may very well believe.

The behavior of the anonymous poster before the TOC who leaked a student’s confidential at large application is just one example of Schoepenhauer and Lanier’s point—hiding behind anonymity allowed that person to avoid any social or legal consequences for their despicable behavior.

Other factors in these online mob attacks include deindividualization and groupthink tendencies, which make fair and open discussion impossible. Deindividualization is what psychologists define as a process which alters individual behavior: “when belonging to a crowd, a person will be ‘able to indulge in forms of behavior in which, when alone, they would not indulge’” (Festinger et al). In other words, there is a diffusion of responsibility, a depersonalization that results in at best, groupthink and at worst, a “mob mentality” (Bogdan). “Groupthink, a term coined by social psychologist Irving Janis (1972), occurs when a group makes faulty decisions because group pressures lead to a deterioration of “mental efficiency, reality testing, and moral judgment”. A group is especially vulnerable to groupthink when its members are similar in background, when the group is insulated from outside opinions, and when there are no clear rules for decision-making” (McCallum).

Irving Janis (1972) has documented eight symptoms of groupthink; for the purpose of this article we will focus on five symptoms that we think are particularly relevant to those who engage in online attacks on debate websites. These symptoms include:

  1. Belief in inherent morality – Members believes in the rightness of their cause and therefore ignore the ethical or moral consequences of their decisions.
  2. Stereotyped views of out-groups – Negative views of “enemy” make effective responses to conflict seem unnecessary.
  3. Direct pressure on dissenters – Members are under pressure not to express arguments against any of the group’s views.
  4. Self-censorship – Doubts and deviations from the perceived group consensus are not expressed.
  5. Self-appointed ‘mindguards’ – Members protect the group and the leader from information that is problematic or contradictory to the group’s cohesiveness, view, and/or decisions.

One may wonder why groups of highly intelligent debaters would be subject to the dynamics of groupthink. Presumably people trained in logical argumentation would be capable of recognizing and correcting such biases. Unfortunately, these biases can and do overwhelm otherwise intelligent people’s ability to think, argue and interpret clearly and honestly based on facts. As a result, we see circuit LDers deliberately choosing to rely on gossip, biased suspicions, and outright lies whenever it suits them.

We are creating a generation of students who believe that hostility, unsubstantiated claims and dishonest attacks are best practices for effective communication.

Racles Bogdan, explains this process as he elucidates how emotions interact with the meaning and knowledge making process:

Trust is based in both emotion and reason, where we make meaning from how we feel and also the knowledge we hold.  When you put the two together, you make meaning, in all its fullness where emotions and reason merge. This meaning is made from two parts of your brain: the part that processes information and is logical and analytical; and the part of your brain that protects you from danger and ignites the fight or flight response (i.e. your “lizard brain”).

If one’s emotional response toward a person (or organization) is already predisposed to be negative – because of perceived threat, lack of understanding, values conflict, or their membership in a marginalized group – then one’s reasoning apparatus will align with those negative feelings.

It will never matter what new facts and arguments the stigmatized students, teams, or coaches present in their defense; they will always be condemned as suspicious, guilty, and unworthy of being treated as equal human beings.

One way to understand the genesis of these online mob attacks is as a series of sad attempts stemmed from a warped need for acceptance and validation. These attacks are desperate expressions of some students’/coaches’ worst fear: that they will lose to those queer/quare, black, brown or female bodies who they deem less worthy or deserving.

Bogdan elaborates that an environment of animosity, aggression and incivility amplifies the risks explained above, given fight-or-flight responses which make rational discourse impossible:

In a situation where emotions are triggered, physiological responses take place and blood recedes from thinking part of the brain, rushes to reptilian brain, triggering fight or flight and rendering new information useless and impossible. Your reaction to run away or strike back has its uses in situations of danger, but it also means we take this instinct into situations where it can increase our challenges, where there are better ways to respond.  We fail to distinguish between situations that endanger us and those that make us uncomfortable and this stops our learning, understanding and growing and takes all of us away from the opportunity to create something new and better (Emphasis added).

Some argue that circuit Lincoln Douglas debaters have comported themselves appropriately online and have rationally and fairly participated in “educational” discourse which has given marginalized people and others a fair hearing in which they have been able to provide a vigorous defense. They may further assert that such online discussions have only been in response to what they interpret as unfair practices by tournament administrators; however, this position is not reflected in the evidence that exists.

When victims of online attacks have presented their defenses in the same format–assuming that there was a chance they could persuade the online mobs to view them dispassionately — circuit LDers have consistently used the following psychopathic and maladaptive responses, which function as case studies for the psychological theories we have cited so far:

  • Those who we think look or act different from the norm should be attacked.
  • Those who are attacked ought not be defended vigorously by people in authority.
  • Those with a duty of care toward attacked students have an obligation not to strongly condemn, oppose or deter such bullying from continuing or else– “they are fighting fire with fire.”
  • Those who are attacking should be left alone and/or encouraged to keep going.
  • Those who are attacked “had it coming” (i.e. “they should stay in their place”).
  • Those who are attacked (and marginalized) should to go to another place designed for them (such as the Urban Debate Leagues), but the initial attack ought not be critiqued.
  • Debate should not be a safe space for minority/marginalized participants and we don’t care if it isn’t, our sole role is to choose who did the better job of debating, we are not educators.
  • The students in question are merely collateral damage whose sacrifices are needed to promote “education” and “discussion” on key issues affecting the community.

These despicable arguments are not straw men; they have actually been and continue to be used in the online bullying which takes place in our community. Unfortunately, innocence, rational argument, diplomacy, “turning the other cheek” and/or adult authority/professionalism will not protect anyone from online abuse.

In the current climate where the debate-centered websites serve as both places to educate and attack students, judges, and coaches, these attacks are impossible to escape. Because these sites are popular within the community and attached to widely supported summer institutes and online educational support, attacks serve to galvanize the community to exile and shun any student, judge or coach that the internet gangsters do not believe should be in the auditorium.

Lanier argues: “I worry about the next generation of young people around the world growing up with internet-based technology that emphasizes crowd aggregation… will they be more likely to succumb to pack dynamics when they come of age?” The utopian tendency is to believe that social media pluralizes and diversifies opinion; most of the evidence suggests that it is just as likely, when combined with anonymity, to reinforce groupthink and extremism (Lanier).

All of these factors: anonymity, groupthink, a pre-disposition of negative bias against out-groups (i.e. minorities/marginalized groups) and group polarization all combine into the explosive situation in which we find circuit LD, and ironically, where “Circuit LD” found itself in round 7 at the National Tournament of Champions:

In round 7 of Lincoln-Douglas debate at the 2014 Tournament of Champions an explosion occurred. All of the above theory about online behavior erupted in person as scores of students, coaches and judges refused to go to their rounds because of a perceived injustice. We call this the “TOC Explosion of Entitlement of 2014.” An African-American coach (one of the authors of this article) brought an ethics violation to the tournament directors. His student was given a loss in spite of the winning student admitting in-round that he carded the straw man of an article and passed it off as the author’s advocacy, only clarifying when pressed in cross-examination. The tournament directors found that the ethics violation was substantial and serious enough to merit a double-loss since the judge’s decision on the round had already been made. It is worth noting that the tabroom directors intentionally did NOT tell the tournament directors what schools were involved before a decision was made. In the view of the protesters, quoting a straw person did not rise to the level of an ethical violation since it was admitted in cross examination that the author concluded the other way. The protesters also said things like, “This happens all the time/is standard practice/philosophers do it all the time.” The question no one has asked is if the question wasn’t asked, would all involved have known the true intent of the author as it was being used to verify a claim. 

“Outrage” spread throughout the tournament. A mob organized a spontaneous “sit-out”. Over 40 coaches, students, and judges went outside of the lobby of the building that was the center of the LD Tournament and refused to go to round 7. They “struck a blow for justice.” In their view, they never denied that the misuse of evidence was real; they were instead more concerned that a particular Black coach was using his “undue influence” on the tournament officials. In this case, the mob’s inherent suspicion and fear of “Black control” overwhelmed any sense of restraint, sportsmanship and professionalism. It is possible that it is purely coincidental that the recipients of the online vitriol — and in this case in person hostility — were either persons of color, women or gay, but we believe that this issue is too important for our community to not seriously examine the intent of such objectively dangerous destructive behavior.

As evidence for the hostile and dangerous environment these students and coaches created, when the Black coach’s debater walked down the steps to go to his next round, a person from the mob pointed in his direction and shouted:

“There he is!!!” 

The student turned around in shock. Another coach saw this situation and felt the need to escort him to his round to ensure his physical safety. “Don’t go anywhere without an escort,” this coach told the frightened student. ALL individuals in the protest are culpable for creating the culture that lead several students and coaches to be concerned about their safety, EVEN IF they believed they were engaged in legitimate protests.

In response to the “sit-out,” the tournament officials tried on multiple occasions to explain their actions to an angry, yelling mob of students and coaches, but these efforts were to no avail. The round was delayed, pairings were redone, and judges were replaced. Our “heroes” thought that they were striking a blow for justice. They only succeeded in terrorizing more students. The online world of virtual bullying had stepped into the real world.

It is worth noting that another protest by another school was filed earlier in the tournament (against a student who happened to be of color), reevaluated after being originally denied by the tab room, and then granted, which caused the pairings to be redone. Was there any protest regarding the new pairings? (It is also worth noting that the judge involved denied that the offense being protested even occurred). Did the ruling inflame or incite more protests? It did not.

III. Haven’t Disagreements within Our Community Happened Before?

Richard Sodikow was not always a beloved figure. Throughout his career there were serious heated disagreements with other coaches. Like many extremely successful coaches, he was accused of cheating, being hostile, arrogant, and mean-spirited. But coaches largely dealt with this by talking to, arguing with, and yelling at each other. It was usually not in front of students. We understood that we were educators and the problems within our community come from the adults in our community. Our students need to be shielded from the adult controversies of administration. It is up to the coaches to fight and work it out behind closed doors. Fourteen and fifteen year olds need to concentrate on getting better at the activity we love. When the alarms go off the confusion should be on the outside, not in the realm of our students. The impacts of these new controversies are far worse given that the comments stay online forever, and can be Googled or searched on the internet, at a later date. The impact on victims for college admissions, internships, and even future employment is undeniable and intolerable.

IV. This has NOTHING to do with issues of Race: Quit “Race-Baiting,” “Playing the Race Card,” “Being All Al Sharpton-Like”

As the authors of this article are all African American men, it would be fair to say that we find many of the targets of online vitriol to be either racial minorities, or women (many who self-identify as “persons of color”). The online attacks on students and coaches of color are too significant to ignore if one is being truly objective. In the 1970’s, psychiatrist Chester M. Pierce, MD, developed the concept and study of “racial micro aggressions” in the interactions between those of majority culture and self-identified racial minorities. Derald Wing Sue, PhD, (Teachers College, Columbia University psychologist) defined micro aggressions as one of the “everyday insults, indignities and demeaning messages sent to people of color by well-intentioned white people who are unaware of the hidden messages being sent to them,” (DeAngelis). Sue attempts to define distinctions in micro aggressions by labeling them as follows:

Microassaults: Conscious and intentional actions or slurs, such as using racial epithets, displaying swastikas or deliberately serving a white person before a person of color in a restaurant.

Microinsults: Verbal and nonverbal communications that subtly convey rudeness and insensitivity and demean a person’s racial heritage or identity. An example is an employee who asks a colleague of color how she got her job, implying she may have landed it through an affirmative action or quota system.

Microinvalidations: Communications that subtly exclude, negate or nullify the thoughts, feelings or experiential reality of a person of color. For instance, white people often ask Asian-Americans where they were born, conveying the message that they are perpetual foreigners in their own land. (Sue)

We will, as did Sue, focus on microinsults and invalidations as they are perhaps more prevalent in our activity. It IS worth noting that in circuit LD and some summer institutes over the past two years, students and coaches have been consistent victims of microinsults. For example, in the past couple of years, one student’s framework was referred to publically as the “nigger framework” in a camp environment. Other examples include publically declared attacks at minority students such as the following: “She/he should talk about the topic (a juvenile justice and broader criminal justice resolution we might add) instead of running that race crap” or, “It is obvious why she/he was chosen for that round robin #affirmativeactionsucks.”

Even professional credentials and pedagogical success cannot protect minority coaches from such racially charged condemnation. We have been told that people are “threatened” when we watch our own students debate and that our presence creates “an uncomfortable atmosphere” for them. This unfounded racially charged concern has gone so far that at one season ending invitational that there was serious discussion of banning some black coaches from watching their own kids debate—a right that was explicitly given to all coaching staffs. The idea that some coaches felt that it was acceptable to interpret black coaches’ bodies as threats (and to functionally, demand that they are denied rights which apply to all other white coaches at the tournament) is not only fundamentally racist but also disproves the idea that we live in a post-racial circuit LD world.

To be clear, last time we checked, no real-life gangsters or “thugs” spend their time as full or part time debate coaches. The only possible exception is the “thug life” that many who launch rhetorical Molotov cocktails from the safety of their respective domiciles/computers in virtual anonymity embrace.

Interestingly, some are so bold/emboldened by privilege in many cases, that they don’t mind putting their names online because they feel they have instant “credibility”, because of who they are. They also know that few will respond for fear of the backlash.

Despite the overwhelming evidence, many readers may still exclaim that these actions have “NOTHING to do with Race”, or possibly “just because people disagree with you does not mean we are racist.”

While a fair retort, writer Tori DeAngelis explains the reasoning behind such a response:

“It’s a monumental task to get white people to realize that they are delivering microaggressions, because it’s scary to them,” he contends. “It assails their self-image of being good, moral, decent human beings to realize that maybe at an unconscious level they have biased thoughts, attitudes and feelings that harm people of color.

Before those reading retreat into appeals to colorblindness, or worse yet a refusal to listen to those of us who are “canaries in the mine”, perhaps heeding the words of Pulitzer Prize winning author Nicholas Kristof is in order when he recently opined that: 

A starting point is for those of us in white America to wipe away any self-satisfaction about racial progress. Yes, the progress is real, but so are the challenges. The gaps demand a wrenching, soul-searching excavation of our national soul, and the first step is to acknowledge that the central race challenge in America today is not the suffering of whites.

We suggest that a more mature and ethical response is to actually listen to, and reflect on the examples and experiences we present here. A truly inclusive community would not metaphorically stick their heads in the sand to wish away these experiences, they would instead empathize and take action.

V. We Must Act: Protecting Your Own Students is Not Enough

If a teacher witnessed someone terrorizing a child in another classroom, he would be morally and legally obligated to act. If he tried to excuse his silence by saying that he is only responsible for those in his own classroom, he would appropriately lose his job and face legal sanction. We are ethically, and legally, responsible to take care of all the students in our collective auditorium.

Many may believe that only students, judges and coaches of color (or other marginalized groups) are affected by the scenarios we describe. Witnesses to these online mob attacks would be well served to remember the analogy of the miner’s canary. Historically, coal miners carried canaries with them as a warning signal against the invisible, deadly fumes within. If the canary died, the miners knew to get out before it was too late. We believe that this analogy fits the situation of the online mob attacks in LD. Those who foolishly assume that the students we have described earlier are the only ones who have been under threat are making a dangerous error in judgment. Like the TOC Explosion of Entitlement of 2014, the mine will eventually explode.

A famous poem that began circulation in the 1950s describes the dangers of intellectuals avoiding conflict and refusing to take action in Germany during WWII:

First they came for … and I did not speak out – because I was not …

It concludes,

Then they came for me – and there was no one left to speak for me.

The hesitance of the majority of members of the debate community to speak out, either because they do not perceive hostile messages unless personally directed or because they fear reprisal, leads to a world where civil discourse is replaced with hate speech.  If we believe in the power of speech, we cannot afford to allow some to be silenced by the antipathy of others.

Maybe no one ever comes. Maybe a coach’s team excels to the highest levels of success on the National Circuit. The question remains, at what cost? Some may see our analogies and examples as hyperbolic. We disagree.

Many of the online mob attacks are arguably illegal in nature. But the real crime here is that these mobs continue to be empowered by both the silence of bystanders and the pitchforks held by those coaches and camp instructors who spearhead (or tolerate) the abuse. As a community we cannot claim to care about education while we allow children and other educators to be under siege at tournaments and in online forums.

VI. Acting on Our Obligation to Protect All of the Children in the Auditorium

Coaches must be proactive and stop being cowards–they ought to make protecting all of the children in the auditorium top priority because they have the pedagogical and moral duty to stamp out online bullying. Here are a few places to start:

1. Stop Supporting Institutions that Allow/Encourage Rhetorical Violence that Hurts Children

Adult educators must stop supporting institutions that tolerate attacks on minors, judges and coaches. While pedagogical disagreements are acceptable, continued support of environments which show disregard for student, judge, and coach welfare should face financial consequences. Refusing to intervene is morally callous and indicates tacit acceptance of the abuse/bullying of children. Child welfare should determine where coaches and students allocate their resources. If not, we are insincere hypocrites in our claims to want debate to be a safe space for all children.

Students, judges and coaches who knowingly attend a summer institute, buy educational services from, or participate (even innocently) in the online forums of companies that host websites that allow such attacks share responsibility for the destruction of safe educational debate spaces. In this light, posting a sticker of offending institutes on a laptop or bag has become the debate equivalent of flashing a gang sign. The sticker serves a dual purpose: 1) as an implicit threat to any judge who does not want to end up on the target end of a flame war, and 2) a defense against being the next target.

Recently a highly respected, highly successful coach spoke to us of a fear of telling students that they could not attend a certain institute affiliated with a website that allows anonymous attacks on students, coaches, and programs. There was concern about what would happen to the program if it got back to the people who ran the summer institute. This coach had a well-grounded fear that his/her respected program and its students would be targeted for online abuse. The fear of reprisal was so intense that the calculation of “while online attacks are bad and harm children, I cannot risk the chance that my students are attacked.” We feel strongly that is sentiment is felt by many who choose to stay silent.

These gangster methods of intimidation have no place in our activity. Stop funding them.

2. Online Discussion Boards Must Institute and Consistently Enforce Policies to Regulate Future Conduct

Offending online debate websites must immediately institute and enforce policies that will not allow their sites to poison the debate space including, but not limited to, specifically disallowing negative comments about students, judges, and coaches on their sites. Allowing these comments at best teaches bad sportsmanship. At worst, allowing those comments is a deliberate attempt to intimidate, harass, and bully students and judges.

Some websites’ administrators may respond that they are objective “news” organizations or free forums for educational discussion. But the owners of these sites have clear financial interests tied to outcomes of debates; they advertise that if you come to their camp, they will teach you how to become champions. This claim is meaningless unless the people who attend their institutes win. These sites do not acknowledge their blatant conflict of interest. Their allowance of bullying is not in the interest of free speech. These sites are tolerating the abuse of minors and the judges and coaches who care about them in order for their clients to win more rounds. Additionally, these same websites receive advertising money for each additional, controversy-induced hit. (In the spirit of disclosure the authors either run or have taught at institutes in the past, but do not host or run debate blogs or websites.)

Others may claim that the individual’s right to free speech should trump the claims we make here. We believe that this position is off the mark. Consideration of the appropriateness of the time, place, and manner of disagreement is in order in any conversation about free speech. Discussing the specifics of a student’s at-large application in a public forum is not the appropriate place. Challenges to a student’s evidence ethics should occur in tab rooms, not online blogs for a public flogging. And at no point should racist or sexist insults be included when discussing philosophical disagreements. Those who use the “free speech” excuse to permit the bullying we described here ought to adopt a student-centered perspective which balances freedom of expression with student welfare and safety.

Some circuit LD sites may argue that these policies have already been in place. However, even as recently as the 2013-2014 season the abusive behaviors described earlier have NOT been consistently and rigorously opposed by site administrators, especially when the targets of such abuse have been students and/or coaches of color who do not share their camp affiliation.

While in theory such policies have been in place, in practice a “hands off” approach has been adopted instead.

Sites that want to make money off of teaching and promoting circuit LD debate must stop threatening and poisoning the community.

3.  Educators Must Strongly Condemn the Racist, Sexist Attitudes That Are Often the Basis of These Attacks

Sadly, much of the bullying and intimidation we describe here stems from an anti-educational and anti-intellectual attitude toward those students (with particular targeting of students of color and women) who wish to expand the range of scholarship they learn through Lincoln-Douglas debate.

Amazingly, some coaches and camp institute instructors have suggested that scholarship which speaks to the particular experiences and perspectives of marginalized populations (such as women, Native Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans, LGBTQQ groups, etc.) is on-face “morally bankrupt” and unsuitable for debate. We believe this type of attitude is misinformed.

If LD debaters genuinely believe in the “marketplace of ideas,” and that the debate space is for debaters, then the exclusion or elitist dismissal of literature speaking to experiences/issues of difference is indefensible.

To be clear, what we call for requires genuine respect and honest consideration of alternative ideas and scholarship—mere tolerance through having a handful of summer camp sessions on “Critical Race Theory” or “Feminism” is not, by itself, evidence of substantial and authentic consideration. Constructive engagement regarding the serious academic study of differences (and corresponding acceptance of people from different backgrounds) is required, all year round: online AND offline.

4. Close the Doors!: The National Speech and Debate Association, The National Debate Coaches Association, and the National Tournament of Champions Should Develop an Online Code of Conduct and Require Adherence as a Prerequisite for Participation

Academic debate is dependent on honesty and fair conduct. Participation in online bullying, attacking students, coaches and judges should be enough to be disinvited from all of these prestigious tournaments. People responsible for sites that allow this poor sportsmanship to occur should also be disinvited. Making online statements about students or coaches already means that you would not be able to fairly judge that student or a student from that coach’s school. The commenter is a participant in making the tournament hostile toward the targeted students. No student or coach or judge or team should walk into a tournament feeling under siege.

These tournaments must make a decision as to whether the poisonous world of online bullying has a place at their tournament. These tournaments, and national tournaments in general, can no longer pretend that they do not see or recognize the problem of online bullying and how their silence makes them complicit in these attacks against children.

Too often this year we have spoken to coaches who have said that they did not know what was happening and that they did not know that students (mostly minors) were treated so badly. Coaches have a duty to be more aware of what is going online given that such forums are the vehicle by which many debate people communicate. Some have said, “I didn’t know that was an issue. I didn’t read that stuff,” or “I just thought it was a camp war.”

Now, everyone knows. It’s time to make decisions. It is time for these prestigious tournaments specifically, and national tournaments in general, to protect every student who walks into their auditoriums. An enforced code of conduct is a minimal standard that we must take to stop the predatory, profit-driven adults from abusing the children in our midst.

Conclusion

When listening to the statements of the affected students at the beginning of this essay, we must ask ourselves how any responsible adult could ever, ever allow that to happen to another young person. It is now time to choose. Neutrality is an abdication of our deepest professional and human responsibility.

Over time Richard Sodikow was forgiven for the many conflicts he had with adults because it was clear to everyone in his path that he was an educator who loved to teach and train all of the children in our community. He positively impacted programs beyond Bronx Science and considered his support of other programs—especially programs where students are Black, Brown, and from different economic classes—as essential to the integrity of our community. Right now in our community, the judging and decisions all lack integrity, and every coach (full or part time), every judge, and every educator is responsible for showing leadership in changing the norms that exist in circuit LD.

It is now our turn to gather all of our children into the auditorium, walk on stage and yell at the top of our collective voices, “Close the doors!” And then we must ring the alarms that will push the hatred and danger away.

Jonathan Alston – Director of Debate at Science Park High School

Anthony Berryhill – Ph.D. Candidate in Political Theory at Yale

Aaron Timmons – Director of Debate at Greenhill School

Sources:

AAMC, “Test Sections – 2015 MCAT forStudents.”

https://www.aamc.org/students/applying/mcat/mcat2015/testsections/

Bogdan, Racles, Hating the Herd, Our Unknown Enemy: Mob Mentality, October 14, 2012.  http://bqsuvt.wordpress.com/2012/10/14/our-unknown-enemy-mob-mentality/

DeAngelis, Tori, Freelance writer and journalist – former Editor for the American Psychological Society, Unmasking ‘racial micro aggressions’, American Psychological Association, 2009, Vol 40, No. 2.

http://www.apa.org/monitor/2009/02/microaggression.aspx

Festinger, L., Pepitone, A., & Newcomb, T. Some consequences of individuation in a group. Journal of Social Psychology, (1952).  47, 382-389.

Janis, Irving L.  (Scholar in Residence at UC Berkeley. Victims of Groupthink. New York: Houghton Mifflin. (1972)

http://www.psysr.org/about/pubs_resources/groupthink%20overview.htm

Hendricks, (Vincent F.) Professor of Formal Philosophy at University of Copenhagen, The Conversation, June 5, 2014,

http://theconversation.com/the-21st-century-bystander-effect-happens-every-day-online-27496

Kristoff, Nicholas. When Whites Just Don’t Get It – After Ferguson, Race Deserves More Attention, Not Less, New York Times, Aug. 30, 2014 http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/31/opinion/sunday/nicholas-kristof-after-ferguson-race-deserves-more-attention-not-less.html?_r=0

Lanier, Jaron, 2010, You Are Not a Gadget

 http://r-u-ins.org/resource/pdfs/YouAreNotAGadget-A_Manifesto.pdf

Le Bon, G., (1896) General Characteristics of crowds – Psychological Law of Their Mental Unity. The Crowd: A study of the Popular Mind. Book I, Chapter I.

Le Bon, G., (1913) The Psychology of Revolutionary Crowds, The Psychology of Revolution, 4, 57-63 http://socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/lebon/Revolution.pdf

Muchnik, L., Aral, S., and Taylor, S. Social influence bias: a randomized experiment. Science. Vol. 341, 9 August 2013, p. 647. doi: 10.1126/science.1240466

McCallum, Stephani Roy, Uncivil Discourse and Mob Mentality, Dialogue Partners, Bringing People Together, April 18 2013 http://dialoguepartners.ca/uncivil-discourse-and-mob-mentality/

National Speech and Debate Association, “Code of Honor.”

https://www.speechanddebate.org/codeofhonor

Stanford University, “Study of Undergraduate Education at Stanford”

http://web.stanford.edu/dept/undergrad/sues/SUES_Report.pdf

The article was obtained with permission from here.

Recently Passed NDCA Proposals -- Petition Against Online Bullying

Proposal 14.10.13.01-- Cyber-Bullying Petition Passed the NDCA on a vote of 8-1 with Jim Menick dissenting.

"I want to move that the NDCA Board sign The Pledge for Online Civility in the Debate Community."

Script of the petition:

The Pledge for Online Civility in the Debate Community

Debaters are part of a greater community that fosters education, competition, and mutual respect.  And as a community, we have an obligation to cultivate a safe and respectful environment free of intimidation, harassment, and cyberbullying. 

Online discussion within the debate community is healthy and for the most part, overwhelmingly positive. However, sometimes online discussions devolve into “flame wars” where members of our debate community become the targets of name-calling, false accusations, and other harassing and intimidating behavior that has no place in our community.

Such online harassment does very real and permanent damage that often far exceeds what even the attacker intended.  Victims can be haunted by the irrevocable and public nature of how the internet keeps everything online for everyone to find and see forever.  False accusations might be perceived as true by prospective employers, college admission officers, or even family and friends.  For the attacker, they too must live with the damage they’ve done, and in some cases, face legal consequences of their own.

Bullying and harassment in this modern, online age can spiral out of control so quickly and so egregiously, that we owe it to ourselves to rise above it and put an end to it.

To that extent, we hold each other accountable and to ask of each other a pledge of civility—a promise not to be a cyberbully.  We pledge to keep it civil.  Specifically, we pledge:

  1. To stop and think before we post

    We understand that once it’s out there, we can’t take it back.  Our words will be forever available to the entire world and will reflect upon our ‘target’ (and ourselves) forever.  So we will choose words carefully, base them in fact, and when in doubt, err on the side of caution.

  2. To tone it down

    Spirited discussion is one thing.  Escalating hyperbole, insults, threats, and anything else that might be chalked up to “heat of the moment” communication instead of rationale thought should never be posted online.  We can disagree without being disagreeable.

  3. To take it off line

    We recognize that if a conversation is escalating in a bad way, we should take it off line—or at least out of the public realm.  Email.  Pick up a phone.  Have a meeting.  The world doesn’t need a permanent record of our argument.

  4. To not pile on

    Online threads tend to draw others into one side or another.  And as the conversation devolves, so does the level of civility by everyone on the thread.  We won’t take the bait.  We won’t keep adding fuel to someone else’s fire—something that only serves to make a bad thread even worse.

  5. To reintroduce social graces to online forums

    Nice, polite people can turn into real jerks from behind a keyboard.  Basic human etiquette and manners go out the window.  We’ll strive to bring back pleasantries, mutual respect, and basic human kindness to make the online world a friendlier and less-intimidating place to communicate and debate.

Please join us in our effort to keep it civil and preserve the debate community as a safe and productive community.   

Rationale for supporting proposals regarding advertising and wiki -- Dana Randall

I am writing to provide members with the rationale I had when supporting and voting for the following to proposals:

Proposal 14.09.15.01 -- Advertising on the website (The vote count was 7-0, Shane Stafford and Maggie Berthiaume Abstained)

I formally propose we solicit advertising for our website and for the policy and LD wiki sites.

Proposal 14.09.15.02 -- Stipend for wiki, Revenue Sharing (Passed Unanimously)

I formally propose we pay a stipend of $1,000 annually to Aaron Hardy for his work on the wiki as well as split the profit from all ad revenues on the wiki on a 50/50 basis with him.

This summer I worked at the University of Michigan Debate Institute for seven weeks.  I am ashamed to admit that as a long time user of the Open Evidence project and member of the NDCA this was the first summer wherein I volunteered to upload files for the OpenEv project.  I uploaded all the of the University of Michigan files the last day I was in Ann Arbor and it took me hours to complete the task.  After my eyes were watering from trying to not miss a file or lose my place as I uploaded each document I discovered that my contribution to the project was really very small.  Many members of the community have donated hours and hours of their time to do this summer after summer.   Aaron Hardy is one of those individuals.  The Board member responsible for the OpenEv project estimated that his efforts this summer alone to set up and maintain the OpenEv site totaled over 50 hours.  The proposal for Aaron Hardy’s stipend lists it as for his “work on the wiki” it is worth revising the language to include his work on for the OpenEv project as well.  That is not to say that Aaron’s “work on the wiki” does not warrant much more compensation than the 1,000 stipend the Board decided to offer him.  Prior to Aaron’s managing of the wiki it was primarily maintained by Bill Batterman from Woodward Academy.  After years of volunteering hundreds of hours each year Bill would like a break!  I cannot thank Bill enough for the incredible contribution he made to the community in this capacity for years.  Fortunately for the HS Policy debate community Aaron Hardy volunteered to fill that role.  He spent at least 30 hours setting up the wiki during the pre-season and spends over anywhere from 10-20 hours a week maintaining the site.  Aaron put in these hours and spent his own money to host the wiki, upgrading the server each year, including this year where he moved it to a cloud-based setup to more easily facilitate rapidly scaling it upwards on busy weekends without any expectation of receiving funds from the NDCA.  Multiple debate camps also approached him looking to buy advertising space – wherein he would have received 100% of the revenue – he declined.  His efforts here were entirely to enhance the ease of posting directly from Verbatim, to provide a larger speech document repository, and allow for better full text searches and Tabroom integration.  This was all done prior to my reaching out to Aaron regarding a modest monetary compensation.  I initiated this dialogue with Aaron after receiving dozens of emails at the Wake Forest tournament regarding wiki glitches that I had to forward on to him knowing he was already receiving dozens of similar urgent and entitled emails.

The proposals passed by this Board with regard to a stipend and advertising space will not generate a profit for Aaron Hardy.  The debate community will continue to benefit from his donation of thousands of hours and dollars of his own.  The intention of the proposals was to demonstrate how grateful the organization is for his efforts.

More generally the proposals do not represent and an attempt to promote a for-profit business model.  The NDCA is a non-profit organization.    Last year the NDCA Board passed a proposal to provide Financial Assistance for students hoping to attend the NDCA Championships and for sponsorship of the UDL League Director Conference.  These are efforts the Board felt were consistent with the organization’s mission.  I would like to see these types of efforts increase that is the reason I voted to provide the organization with another means of generating revenue. It is my understanding, after consulting persons much more familiar with technical issues than myself, that the addition of these ads will not slow the operation of the sites.  If that did present a problem then the Board and myself would obviously revisit this decision. 

 

 

 

Newly Passed Proposals by the NDCA Board

The following represent recent proposals passed by the NDCA board:

Proposal 14.08.19.01: End Congress at the NDCA Tournament: (Passed by a vote count of 8-1)

I move that the NDCA tournament procedures be amended to eliminate Congressional Debate.

 

Proposal 14.09.02.01 -- Increased Transparency (Passed Unanimously)

I propose we list the names of who voted and how each member cast their vote on each proposal.  Board members should also be given the option of writing a short synopsis explaining their vote on the NDCA blog, if they so wish.

 

Proposal 14.09.15.01 -- Advertising on the website (The vote count was 7-0, Shane Stafford and Maggie Berthiaume Abstained)

I formally propose we solicit advertising for our website and for the policy and LD wiki sites.

 

Proposal 14.09.15.02 -- Stipend for wiki, Revenue Sharing (Passed Unanimously)

I formally propose we pay a stipend of $1,000 annually to Aaron Hardy for his work on the wiki as well as split the profit from all ad revenues on the wiki on a 50/50 basis with him.

Newly Passed Proposal by the NDCA Board

 

The following proposal was passed on August 15th, by a margin of 6-1, with 1 abstaining.

Proposal 14.08.05.01 -- Chaperones

I move that all of the NDCA National Championships tournament procedures be amended as follows: Add a section entitled “Chaperone” Students competing in tournaments should be accompanied by an adult who is an employee of the school or school district the student represents. To fulfill the requirements of this section schools must fill out and send in Appendix C.

    The LD Novice Topic, a History (AKA, "Clang, Clang, Clang Went the Trolley")

    As we are about to learn the September-October LD resolution, and as many people are gearing up for the new season with their teams and bringing in their novices, I thought it might be a good time to tell this story.

    When I started coaching LD in 1995, the curriculum was heavily dependent on a number of classical philosophical texts, concentrating on a basic set of philosophical ideas like rights protection, the social contract and the harms principle. Every year I would start up a new bunch of novices in September, and every year I wanted to start them roughly the same way to get these basic philosophical ideas across. I recommended introductory reading of Locke and Mill, and went on from there. Given the nature of the topics at the time, this worked quite well.

    LD, of course, has changed, and the topics are seldom the general ethical questions that were usual in the past. Nevertheless, those basic philosophical ideas and introductory readings have always seemed to me a very good way to introduce philosophy and ethics to high school freshman. I guess I could hand them a copy of The Genealogy of Morals at the orientation meeting, but I'd actually like to have them come back again to the second meeting. For that matter, I'd like to come back to the second meeting as well. The minute we get on to Nietzsche, I'm outta there (as a couple of students I've judged over the years will no doubt readily attest).

    I don't think that I was different from a lot of other coaches who had developed a basic structure for introductory meetings. Granted, there is a school of thought that believes that learning the mechanics of debate is the best starting point, but that's beside the point. If those folks are happy with that approach, more power to them. Meanwhile, the idea of a standard curriculum of philosophy/ethics study as a starting point worked for a lot of us. I would maintain that even for the most modern styles of LD, learning the basics first is a good thing. I mean, even Thelonius Monk put in his time at Juilliard.

    The problem with wanting a standard starting curriculum was that we were subject to the luck of the draw when it came to the topic the novices would be debating. Sometimes the topic leant itself to one's standard curriculum, while sometimes the topic seemed to have been selected entirely so that a given year's novices would all quit by October 1st, before they completely lost their sanity.

    Being an inherently lazy person, motivated by the idea of doing as little work as possible, I had the idea that, if we could only have the same starting topic every year, I could use literally the same starting curriculum season after season. I could develop what I felt was the best lesson plan for training and keeping LDers, and I could use that plan every year without having to worry if it applied to the resolutions the students would be debating. I tried this idea out on a few people, and some of them liked it. Others, not so much. The luck of the draw wasn't all that bad, they said. They were content to leave things as they were.

    And then the trolley came to town.

    The 2008 Sept-Oct LD resolution was: It is morally permissible to kill one innocent person to save the lives of more innocent people. On face, this is simple enough, and it's certainly easy enough to present as a thought experiment. The idea of a trolley you can switch from one heavily populated track to a different lightly populated track is a classic, used for all sorts of things, including analyzing morality on a cross-cultural basis. Most people, regardless of age, nationality, culture, religion, etc., agree that it is preferable to kill the one and let the five live.

    If only debating it were that simple. The thing is, this resolution draws on some of the most sophisticated morality issues in the realm of philosophy. The calculus does not remain as simple as the basic one vs. many. At the point where you throw another person off the bridge to stop the trolley, usually step two in the thought experiment, you are dealing with issues of agency and action and the like that are beyond the abilities of many college philosophy students. Explaining why one feels differently about one's mother being the one vs. strangers being the five? Well, that’s (perhaps) the root genesis of morality (with apologies to Nietzsche). This is all great material, and many of us could build an entire course or two around it. But for high school freshmen with no understanding yet of the simplest ideas of ethics and morality? It was two months of hell.

    I would now like to officially thank all of those who voted for this topic. It was just what I needed to launch my devious plan for a standard novice topic. I called the proposal the Modest Novice, an obvious tip of the hat to Jonathan Swift, although I had no plans to eat any novices if the proposal fell through.

    I doubt if I'm the first person who ever thought of having a repeating topic for novices, but coming up with the idea was only the beginning. Making it happen was another thing altogether. I'm from New York. Around here, we have a number of relatively self-contained groups that compete together off and on during the year. There's Massachusetts, there's New York City, there's upper New York from about Albany to the City border (my location), there's Long Island, and there's New Jersey. While these people might compete against one another occasionally, they never communicate on an official basis. The only thing linking them is their attendance, occasionally, at one another's tournaments. And the only way that the idea of a novice topic would work was if I could get most of them to agree to it. In the middle of all of this is a tournament I run in November, attended by most of these contingents. I offer novice LD. I wanted as many teams to come as possible, so either I had to convince just about everybody, or there was no point to it. At my tournament I'd have half a division if I didn't get decent buy-in. And we couldn’t very well have novices debating one topic one week and another topic the next week. It was an all-or-nothing proposition.

    I looked at this as similar to Don Corleone trying to unite the families. I'm no Marlon Brando, but I had the Five Families that I had to get to agree. These families often didn't see eye-to-eye on many things, including the direction that LD was taking at the time (which is, for all practical purposes, where LD is today). In other words, there were some very conservative elements among them. And there was concern for their own students. Whatever system we had operated under since the invention of LD was, one way or the other, working, even if occasionally you had to throw the fat guy in front of the trolley. Change is never easy. Change against long-accepted orthodoxy can be well nigh impossible, not to mention structural change in a situation where there is no organizational structure. The job was to meet with all the leaders of the Five Families and convince them of the viability of the idea.

    I started with my immediate peers in suburban New York, plus a few of my friends in the other families. We all agreed that we should do it, which gave me a base to build from. Chris Palmer built us a little website (http://www.modestnovice.org/) where we could keep people posted on what was happening, and kick around various ideas. We hashed out what topic to use at that year's Lexington Winter Tournament. I can't remember who came up with civil disobedience; I had originally been leaning toward bad gov vs no gov, one of my personal favorites, but CD eventually won out. As far as the Five Families were concerned, Palmer, who was one of the strong supporters of the idea from the start, was at the time the head of the Massachusetts Forensic League. Lexington, Manchester-Essex and Needham was a big buy-in right off the start, thanks to Palmer and the MFL agreeing to support it. We were on our way.

    The chief objections to the Modest Novice, aside from that fact that it was new and untested, were these:
    • Any LD team would, at a given time, have to deal with two topics at the same time, with all the attendant drain on coachean resources
    • Judges might have to judge two different topics at the same tournament
    • Teams would develop "Super" cases that they would simply hand to their novices, insuring cheap, unearned wins

    The responses to this were these:
    • After the first year, the team would have a set curriculum which it would never have to create again from scratch, plus it would be the best possible curriculum for starting new novices. Not only that, but since all novices would, eventually, grow up and become varsity debaters having learnt themselves from the Modest Novice, they would be able to help pass the wisdom of their experience to the newbies.
    • Almost inevitably, judges are either in one pool or the other. Given that in the northeast, Varsity judging Novices is the norm, the Varsity would be judging the Modest Novice topic and graduates would be judging the topic du jour. Then again, occasionally someone at a tournament judges a round of PF and then a round of LD, and the mental explosion rate as a result of this is minimal. In other words, it's just not that big a deal, and it wouldn’t even happen much.
    • Teams will create "Super" cases and reprocessed cases and hand them to novices regardless of Modest Novice. In other words, this argument was non-unique. If coaches believe their novices are best served by making them into automatons spouting someone else's wisdom, it's going to happen no matter what.

    The key objection was that fear of resources being stretched too far. The response was that, before long, the result would be just the opposite. We're going into our fifth year of this, and I can claim categorically that we were right. Modest Novice was the right thing to do.

    Anyhow, with Massachusetts in the bag, and the local upstate New York people like Scarsdale’s Joe Vaughan on board, there were three families left: NYC, Long Island and New Jersey. With NYC, I already had the Bronx (Jon Cruz was on board from the start). But I remember very clearly sitting down with Eric diMichele of Regis, who was way more Marlon Brando in all of this than I was. If he wasn't onboard, we weren't going anywhere. He sort of shook his head sagely (he does most things sagely) and put in his two cents about making sure we used the CD topic (since we hadn’t completely committed to it yet). If Eric wanted the CD topic, Eric would get the CD topic. With Eric now on board, the NYC UDL organization was fairly easy to convince, given that they didn't have that many LDers and were happy to go with the flow. New Jersey meant Dave Yastremski of Ridge and Jonathan Alston of Newark, the key LD players who participated with the New York teams at the novice level. They came right on board. (Although after we launched Modest Novice, they pulled out for a year or so, and then came back on board again. What can I say? It's New Jersey.)

    By now I had 4 out of 5 of the families. The last one to convince was Long Island, which in a way was the least important as there was little overlap at the novice level with LI and the rest of the area during the early part of the season. And alas, I was not able to convince them. They were mostly in fear of the extra work that it appeared Modest Novice would generate. But there was certainly no hard feelings. They could watch us from afar and decide for themselves later, given that they mostly played among themselves anyhow (Long Island forensics is huge, and further away from the rest of us than you might think).

    So Modest Novice was a go. We've been doing it since 2009, and it's now just part of what we do. To tell you the truth, I was pretty surprised when the NSDA adapted it; I didn't even know they were considering it. I gather that it hasn't yet taken the world by storm, and in brief conversations I've had with people, the objections being forwarded are the same ones that we heard originally. Yes, it is a little extra work the first year or so, but after that, it's a breeze. And more importantly, it provides the opportunity to develop curriculum for new debaters, presumably 9th graders, that is exactly where 9th graders ought to start learning about ethics and rights and morality. Those first few months are the beginning of a great adventure. Doesn't it make sense that we make it the best great adventure possible?

    Podcast #2 on Registration issues

    I wrote about this a few days ago, and got interesting responses. While most people don't personally manage registrations at large national tournaments, most people do want to attend some of them. Getting in or not getting in, therefore, is a big issue.

    I decided to go to two people who have a long history of handling such registrations. Chris Palmer ran Yale's tournament for years, as well as other big college events, and he wrote the tabroom.com software that manages registrations, big and small. Jon Cruz directs the New York City Invitational, which opened registration the same day as Yale this year, and filled to overflowing with about the same rapidity.

    The podcast is available at this link, and should appear on iTunes shortly. After we had talked, I thought that we had at least some sort of plan I could use for handling future overloaded events. Feel free to comment and tell us what you think.

    We Need to Fix Registration Procedures

    There is a problem that there are some tournaments that are very popular, and more people want to go to them than the tournaments can handle. We presently have a fine system of electronic registration that opens at a given published moment. Most people have learned that, if they want to get into a particularly desirable tournament, they must register within seconds of that opening. As I help manage the registrations for Yale, I see dozens and dozens of people who got in at exactly the opening time, which means that tabroom.com can handle quite a few virtually simultaneous registration transactions. I can clear off well over a hundred teams in a division before getting from 9:00 am to 9:02 am.

     

    Given that it’s a tournament with a national draw, while it is 9:00 am in New Haven, it is 6:00 am in Los Angeles. Quite a few people got up awfully early in the morning last Friday. When you’re talking about the NYC Invitational, on the other hand, it’s midnight in the Bronx and 9:00 pm in Palo Alto, so in this case it's a bit of a vigil for the creakier-boned types on the East Coast. People accommodate the starting point, however, whenever it is. I’ve got a feeling that if we made registration for a tournament open at 4 in the morning for every time zone simultaneously, and only accepted registrations from the Clavius Moon Base, we’d still fill up all the divisions within the first couple of minutes.

     

    We “handle” this, maybe, by setting all registrations as waitlist, or putting in an artificial cap somewhere, or maybe just hoping the real cap based on available space does the job. With Yale, it’s all waitlist. Then a couple of us go in and (tediously) take people off the waitlist, starting with those who might need plane tickets. Then it’s pretty much first come, first served. Today people who signed up within 3 minutes of registration opening are wondering why they have not gotten in.

     

    Is there a better way to do this?

     

    I wish I was about to propose a solution to the problem which, simply put, is that success in getting into tournaments ought not necessarily be to the swift. Those swifties, for one thing, are primarily TBA slots. Then again, if the tournament is months away from now, who really knows who’s going if it’s a big squad? Meanwhile, as often as not, some kid on the team does the registrations and grabs all the potential slots available, regardless of need. Should we insist on real names? Should people who live far away get preference simply because it’s harder for them to make arrangements to get there? And worst of all, do I want someone like me personally looking at every registration and saying, oh, I never liked that school, so you’re not in, one school at a time? (Which I don’t do, by the way, but people apparently think I do, going by my emails.)

     

    Where is Solomon when you really need him?

     

    I’m curious about what other people think about this issue. For that matter, I wonder how much of an issue it is to other people. Probably if you always go where you want to go, you have little interest in what I’m talking about. And if you’ve been excluded from where you want to go, you’ve already got your torch and pitchfork ready to storm the battlements. And especially if you run tournaments, you may have faced this problem (or, sadly, only wished you faced it), and thought about better ways of doing it. What, conceivably, could those better ways be?

     

    Any thoughts?

    High School Policy Topic Committee: Final List of Topics

    The High School Policy Topic Committee has convened and provided the final list of topics that will be considered for the 2015-2016 debate year.

    They include:

    Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its legal protection of economic migrants in the United States.

    Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially curtail its domestic surveillance.

    Resolved: The United States federal government should increase progressive taxation, the federal minimum wage, or regulation of predatory lending to substantially decrease income inequality in the United States.

    Resolved: The United States federal government should significantly reform its non-military criminal procedure in the areas of grand juries, plea bargaining, admissibility of evidence and/or sentencing.

    Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially decrease its authority within Indian Country.

    Newly Passed Proposals by the NDCA Board

    The NDCA passed the following proposals on July 14th and July 18th, respectively.  The vote counts are indicated below.

     

    Proposal 14.07.14.01 -- Reporting Failed Proposals (Vote count was 5 yes, 3 No, 1 abstaining)

    I propose that all votes taken by the NDCA Board, regardless of whether they are passed, be made public in a timely fashion.

     

    Proposal 14.07.18.01 -- Extended Voting Time ( Passed unanimously 9-0)

    If more than 2 members of the board have failed to vote within 24 hours the president  should extend the voting period for a reasonable amount of time to allow all board members to vote.