Team Canada and Worlds Style Resources

Team Canada Downloads

Useful Links

What Is Worlds Style?

A Modest Précis by Harold Kyte

Worlds style debating differs from Parliamentary debating significantly even though the format appears, at first blush, to be similar. There are two sides (called proposition and opposition) and three debaters per side. The proposition advances definitions and a case with three arguments. The proposition speaks last. Rebuttal takes place.

The differences are, however, much more striking than the similarities. For example, the burden of proof, while real, is much less significant than in parliamentary debating.

Each speaker has 8 minutes to accomplish different tasks.

Each debater (with the exception of the reply speeches) will be subjected to points of information (POI’s) in the middle six minutes of their speeches – the first and last minute being ‘protected time.’ It is expected that each debater will accept at least two POI’s during his/her remarks. Each debater on the opposing team should offer, at least, two POI's to the debater delivering the speech. Adjudicators are instructed to deduct one or two marks if the lower limits are not attained!! How well a debater handles themselves in the rough and tumble of offering and accepting POI’s is key in worlds style debate.

There are three adjudicators per debate. Team standings are based on the win/lost record with the number of adjudicator ballots (number of judges voting for the team over the course of the competition) as the first tiebreaker. For example if two teams are tied with a 5 (wins) and 1 (loss) record over a six event tournament and the first team as received a total of 13 adjudicator ballots (out of a possible 15), and the second team has only 11 ballots, the first team is placed above the second. If the two teams are still tied, total points are used to decide their relative standing.

The marking scheme is: based on 100 per debater with effective (allowed) cores being between 60 and 80. The categories are presentation, content and strategy with 40 points for the first two and 20 for the last.