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Debate and Academics
 

How does an intercollegiate debate team fit into the campus-wide web of academic programs?

Perhaps the best answer lies in the elemental nature of the academic awareness, skills, and behaviors fostered by tournament debating. The debate team's wide array of instructional goals are laid-out in its annual Instructionally Related Activity report:

Factual Information and Cognitive Skills.

  • Familiarity with essential information and major issues relating to contemporary social, political, and philosophical questions of national and international importance.
  • Understanding the processes of locating, retrieving, evaluating information relating to the major questions of the day.
  • Sensitivity to the need to be able to listen to, understand, critically evaluate, and respond to arguments relating to questions under dispute.
  • Understanding how to construct persuasive arguments relating to questions under dispute, and to defend those arguments against both informed and uninformed objections.
Attitudes, Values, and Social Skills.
  • Appreciation for the epistemic nature of reasoned discourse.
  • Awareness of the need for citizens to be well-informed about the major questions of the day.
  • Appreciation for the function of citizen disputes and differences of opinion in a democratic society.
  • Willingness to participate in the discussions and disputes which underpin the democratic process.
  • Appreciation for and sensitivity to diversity of opinion.
  • Appreciation for the role of ethical behavior in the midst of intellectual disagreement.
  • Understanding the need to be able to work effectively with others even in highly charged situations.
Physical, Performance, and Procedural Skills.
  • An improving ability to present effective oral messages to highly critical audiences.
  • An improving ability to incorporate acquired knowledge and information into discussions about contemporary social, political, and philosophical questions of national and international importance.
  • An improving ability to argue effectively in a highly charged environment.

Obviously, the benefits of developing such basic critical thinking, information processing, and communication skills are not limited to any one discipline or academic program. It is no wonder that the Debate Team draws students from a wide range of majors representing all colleges of the university. As you might expect, Economics, Philosophy, Political Science, and Speech Communication majors are commonplace in academic debate. But, would you believe Aeronautical Engineering, Biochemistry, City and Regional Planning, Industrial Technology, and Viticulture?

Scan the following list. Each of these majors has been represented on the Cal Poly Debate Team in recent years. Is your major there? If not, maybe your fellow students have been missing out on educational experiences that can't be duplicated in a traditional classroom environment.

Aeronautical Engineering
Agricultural Business
Agricultural Science
Biochemistry
Biological Sciences
Business Administration
City and Regional Planning
Civil Engineering
Communication Studies
Computer Engineering
Computer Science
Construction Management
Crop Science
Ecology and Systematic Biology
Economics
English
Financial Management
Fruit Science
Graphic Communication
History
Industrial Technology
Journalism
Liberal Studies
Mechanical Engineering
Philosophy
Political Science
Social Sciences

 

 

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Last Update: 10/01/2005


T C Winebrenner, Director
Cal Poly Debate
English Bldg. 22-316/318
California Polytechnic State University
San Luis Obispo, Ca 93407
805.756.2618 (voice) 805.756.6070 (fax)