Sr Provincial BP Championships - Asper Cup

The Asper Cup is Manitoba Qualifier for the National Canadian British Parliamentary Debate Championships (Grades 10 to 12)

Time: Thursday October 13, 2022. Registration from 3:50-4:10, Awards at 8 pm

Location: In-Person at Gray Academy 123 Doncaster Street, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3N 2B2 (please enter on the main security entrance off of Doncaster and park in the East parking lot. Do not park in the roundabout in front of the school)

JUDGES: PLEASE SIGN UP USING THIS LINK:

https://forms.gle/TXtopq4ezBFzMWwu6

Resolutions: Impromptu current affairs and issues

The tournament is British Parliamentary Style (please consult the rules and guide below). The basic differences are that there are 2 two person teams on each side (so 4 teams in any one debate), the two teams on a side do not prepare with each other) and there are no rebuttals although of course there should be refutation in every speech except for the first one. Speaking times will be 5 minutes. Unlike most of our tournaments, there will not be a novice category in this event because it is a qualifier. That being said, less experienced teams are welcome to take part but must be prepared to meet more experienced opponents.

The top teams will represent Manitoba at the National BP tournament, the Canadian British Parliamentary Debate Championships, (formerly known as the Oxford Cup or the North Americans), the event will be hosted by Selwyn House in Montreal mid November. To be selected, a team must be in the top half of this qualifier tournament results. From that group, we will select the top team from each school but only if the teams are in the top half of the tournament. If there are any additional spaces available, the remaining teams will be selected based on their ranking in the tournament, again only the teams in the top half being eligible.

Schools may send a maximum of 4 two-person teams. Depending upon numbers, it may be possible to send additional teams. If you would like to do so please indicate this in an email to me and I will let you know after registration closes at the end of Monday October 3rd, 2022. Schools must bring one experienced judge per 2 teams. If this presents a problem, please contact me about it and we will see if other arrangements can be made. Judges may not be high school students.

To register, please email Andrew Kaplan akaplan@grayacademy.ca by Monday October 3rd, 2022, stating your name, the number of teams that you will be sending, and if you would like to bring additional teams (beyond the 4 team limit).

The picture can't be displayed.

Manitoba Speech and Debate Association

Asper Cup 2022 (Qualifier for the Canadian British Parliamentary Debate Championships) Schedule

3:50-4:15 Judges and Debater Registration 

4:15  Announcement of the first and second debate resolution and speaking positions

4:15-5:15 Judges Briefing

5:15 First debate begins 

6:15 Break

6:30 Second debate begins 

7:30 Awards Tabulated 

8:00 Awards Presented 

8:15 Tournament Ends         

Introduction to British Parliamentary debate:

This guide is aimed primarily at those of you who have little to no British Parliamentary experience. It is intended to illustrate the mechanics and basic tactics of BP. Sometimes beginners can be discouraged by BP because of various factors in the round. But BP done well can be an incredibly rewarding experience, and trying BP can improve the way you debate in other styles.

The Basics:

In BP there are 4 teams in each round. Two teams represent the Government, and two teams represent the Opposition. The Government supports the resolution, and the Opposition opposes the resolution. The teams are also divided into the Opening and Closing halves of the debate. The teams are organized like this in the room:

|

Opening Government (OG) | Opening Opposition (OO)

______|______ |

Closing Government (CG) | Closing Opposition (CO) |

There are two speakers on each team. Each speaker has a title. The titles are:

OG: Prime Minister

Deputy Prime Minister

CG: Member of the Government Government Whip

The speaking order is as follows:

OO: Leader of the Opposition Deputy Leader of the Opposition

CO: Member of the Opposition Opposition Whip

First Speaker, OG First Speaker, OO Second Speaker, OG Second Speaker, OO First Speaker, CG First Speaker, CO Second Speaker, CG Second Speaker, CO

Debates are presided over by a Speaker, who is often the Chair of the adjudicator panel. The Speaker keeps time and calls debaters to the floor.

Each debater has 5 minutes to speak. The first and last minutes are protected time. This means that no POIs may be offered during this time. The Speaker will give a signal at the end and the beginning of protected time, at the seven-minute mark, and at the end of grace. The Speaker will probably not give time signals otherwise, so it is recommended that debaters bring a stopwatch to time themselves or their partner.

There are no Points of Order, or Points of Personal Privilege.

At the end of each debate, the teams will be ranked from first place to fourth place. Each ranking has a point value associated with it. The common point values used are as follows:

First Place = 3 points

Second Place = 2 points

Third Place = 1 point 

Fourth Place =0 points

At the Asper-Oxford your points are added over the course of the tournament. The break is determined by point total, and speaker points if some teams have the same point total. But since this tournament only has 3 rounds, it will be calculated using speaker scores for both team wins and individual wins. So the judge will assign the higher speaker scores to the team that wins the round.

Matter and Manner

In BP there are two categories that you are judged on as a speaker. Matter is the content of your speech, and manner is how you present that content. Matter and manner are weighted equally. The lists include some of the more common elements of matter and manner, but are not exhaustive.

Matter Includes:

  

Roles of the Teams and Speakers

You’ll hear a lot about the “roles” of teams and speakers in BP. In order for a round to be able to develop properly, the teams participating in the round must fulfill certain criteria. When they succeed they will have fulfilled their role and they will be developing the debate. If they fail then the debate will suffer in quality because of it, and this will absolutely be considered in the adjudication.

Roles of the Teams (Overview)

Opening Government:

  

Deputy Prime Minister (Opening Government):

An example of an acceptable and unacceptable interpretation of a resolution:

Resolution: THW Sell its Children

Acceptable: THW Legalize Surrogacy for Profit

Unacceptable: THBT Developing Nations Should Prioritize Economic Development

Over Environmental Protection

The reason why the second interpretation is abusive is because the original resolution clearly hints at a topic involving the exchange of children for some benefit. This could be a myriad of things, from surrogacy for profit, to foreign adoption limits. So the OG has a degree of flexibility in choosing a topic relating to the selling of children. With this in mind, the second interpretation clearly goes against the spirit of the resolution.

The Role of the Opening Opposition

The Opening Opposition role is probably the one that debaters new to BP will have the least amount of trouble with. It’s fairly similar to the standard CP Opposition, but with different timings. However, there are some extremely important differences between the two.

As the OO team, your role is twofold. You must refute what the OG team has said, but it is not enough to simply poke holes in the OG case. You must also bring in constructive arguments of your own. It is not enough to go into a BP round as an OO team and do a rebuttal-only opposition. A good OO case would make sense if the wording of the resolution were reversed, and OO became the OG. You have to bring your own constructive analysis to the round.

Good OO teams will often tie in some of their rebuttal with their constructive points as well. This allows the judges to see that you’re engaging with the other team’s arguments as well as using them to build up your own. Using this style will also help you stay under the time limit, which is often a difficult thing to do if you’re faced with a lot of rebutting and summarizing.

So remember: It’s not enough to say why their ideas are stupid, you have to say why your ideas are smart.

The Role of the Closing Teams

The closing positions of the debate are where we see the most significant difference between BP and CP debating. Both closing teams are expected to offer an extension for their opening team’s case. What is an extension? An extension can take many forms: