Debate Practice Coach
Frameworks for structured argumentation, counterargument development, logical analysis, and persuasive communication practice with objective scoring.
Argument Structure
Toulmin Model of Argumentation
ARGUMENT BUILDER (Toulmin Model):
CLAIM: [Your main assertion]
What are you arguing?
GROUNDS: [Evidence and data supporting the claim]
What facts back this up?
WARRANT: [The logical connection between grounds and claim]
Why does this evidence support your claim?
BACKING: [Support for the warrant itself]
Why should we trust this reasoning?
QUALIFIER: [Degree of certainty — most, some, probably]
How strong is this claim?
REBUTTAL: [Conditions where the claim doesn't hold]
When would this argument fail?
EXAMPLE:
Claim: "Remote work increases productivity for knowledge workers."
Grounds: "Stanford study showed 13% productivity increase in remote workers."
Warrant: "Fewer interruptions and commute elimination allow deeper focus."
Backing: "Multiple studies confirm interruptions cost 23 min to recover from."
Qualifier: "For most knowledge workers in roles not requiring physical presence."
Rebuttal: "May not apply to new employees needing mentorship or highly
collaborative creative roles."
Argument Types
| Type | Structure | Best For | Example |
|---|
| Deductive | If premises true → conclusion must be true | Logical proofs, policy arguments | "All citizens must follow laws. X is a citizen. Therefore X must follow laws." |
| Inductive | Specific observations → general conclusion | Scientific arguments, trend analysis | "In 50 studies, X led to Y. Therefore X likely causes Y." |
| Abductive | Best available explanation | Diagnostic arguments | "The best explanation for these symptoms is condition X." |
| Analogical | Similar case → similar conclusion | Precedent-based arguments | "Policy X worked in Country A, which shares characteristics with Country B." |
| Causal | X causes Y | Policy proposals, problem-solution | "Increasing minimum wage will reduce poverty because..." |
Counterargument Generation
Counterargument Framework
COUNTERARGUMENT WORKSHEET:
ORIGINAL ARGUMENT: [State the argument you're opposing]
STRATEGY 1 — CHALLENGE THE EVIDENCE:
"The evidence cited is flawed because..."
- Data is outdated: [Explain]
- Sample size insufficient: [Explain]
- Source is biased: [Explain]
- Correlation ≠ causation: [Explain]
STRATEGY 2 — CHALLENGE THE REASONING:
"Even if the evidence is correct, the conclusion doesn't follow because..."
- Logical gap between evidence and claim: [Explain]
- Alternative explanation for the data: [Explain]
- False dichotomy (there are other options): [Explain]
STRATEGY 3 — CHALLENGE THE SIGNIFICANCE:
"Even if the argument is valid, it doesn't matter because..."
- The impact is overstated: [Explain]
- Other factors are more important: [Explain]
- The cost of the proposal outweighs the benefit: [Explain]
STRATEGY 4 — PROVIDE COUNTEREXAMPLES:
"This argument fails in these real-world cases..."
- Example 1: [Where the argument doesn't hold]
- Example 2: [Where the opposite occurred]
STRONGEST COUNTER: [Select best strategy + compose your response]
Steel Man Technique
STEEL MAN PROCESS:
Before arguing against a position, first construct the STRONGEST
possible version of your opponent's argument:
STEP 1: State their argument in your own words
"[Opponent's position as I understand it]"
STEP 2: Check understanding
"Is this a fair representation of your view?"
STEP 3: Strengthen it (add their best evidence)
"In fact, the strongest version of this argument would include..."
- Best available evidence for their position
- Most charitable interpretation of their claims
- Strongest logical chain supporting their conclusion
STEP 4: NOW respond to the strongest version
"Even in its strongest form, this argument has the following problems..."
WHY STEEL MAN:
- Demonstrates intellectual honesty
- Prevents straw man fallacy
- Your counter is more persuasive when addressing the best version
- Builds credibility with the audience
- Forces you to deeply understand the issue
Logical Fallacies Reference
Common Fallacies
| Fallacy | Definition | Example | Response |
|---|
| Ad Hominem | Attacking the person, not the argument | "You can't trust their economic analysis, they didn't finish college." | "The argument's validity is independent of who makes it. Let's examine the evidence." |
| Straw Man | Misrepresenting the argument to attack it | "You want to reduce military spending? So you don't care about national security?" | "That's not my position. I said [actual position]." |
| Appeal to Authority | Citing an authority outside their expertise | "A famous actor says vaccines are dangerous." | "What do the relevant experts (epidemiologists) say?" |
| False Dichotomy | Presenting only two options when more exist | "Either we ban all cars or accept pollution." | "There are many intermediate options: electric vehicles, public transit, emissions standards." |
| Slippery Slope | Claiming one event will inevitably lead to extreme outcomes | "If we allow X, next thing you know Y and Z will happen." | "What evidence exists that X actually leads to Y? Each step requires its own justification." |
| Circular Reasoning | Using the conclusion as a premise | "This policy is good because it's the right thing to do." | "You're assuming what you're trying to prove. Why is it the right thing?" |
| Red Herring | Introducing an irrelevant topic | "We should discuss education funding." "But what about the economy?" | "That's a separate issue. Let's stay focused on education funding." |
| Bandwagon | Appealing to popularity | "Everyone believes X, so X must be true." | "Popularity doesn't determine truth. What does the evidence show?" |
| Appeal to Emotion | Using emotion instead of logic | "Think of the children!" (without relevant evidence) | "I share your concern, but let's examine what the data actually shows." |
| Hasty Generalization | Drawing broad conclusions from limited examples | "I know two people who failed, so the program doesn't work." | "Two cases isn't enough to evaluate the program. What do the aggregate results show?" |
Debate Format Templates
Lincoln-Douglas Format
LD DEBATE FORMAT (1v1):
AFFIRMATIVE:
Constructive speech: 6 minutes
(Present your case with evidence and reasoning)
CROSS-EXAMINATION:
By Negative: 3 minutes
(Questions to clarify and challenge the Affirmative case)
NEGATIVE:
Constructive speech: 7 minutes
(Present your case + respond to Affirmative arguments)
CROSS-EXAMINATION:
By Affirmative: 3 minutes
AFFIRMATIVE:
Rebuttal: 4 minutes
(Respond to Negative arguments, rebuild your case)
NEGATIVE:
Rebuttal: 6 minutes
(Final arguments, summarize why you win)
AFFIRMATIVE:
Rebuttal: 3 minutes
(Final word — crystallize your best arguments)
Policy Debate Format
POLICY DEBATE (2v2):
CONSTRUCTIVES (build your case):
1AC (First Affirmative Constructive): 8 min
Cross-ex by 2NC: 3 min
1NC (First Negative Constructive): 8 min
Cross-ex by 1AC: 3 min
2AC (Second Affirmative Constructive): 8 min
Cross-ex by 1NC: 3 min
2NC (Second Negative Constructive): 8 min
Cross-ex by 2AC: 3 min
REBUTTALS (summarize and weigh):
1NR (First Negative Rebuttal): 5 min
1AR (First Affirmative Rebuttal): 5 min
2NR (Second Negative Rebuttal): 5 min
2AR (Second Affirmative Rebuttal): 5 min
Quick Practice Format
RAPID-FIRE DEBATE (15 minutes total):
SETUP (2 min):
Topic: [Resolution or question]
Side A: [For / Affirmative]
Side B: [Against / Negative]
ROUND 1 — Opening Statements (4 min):
Side A: 2 minutes — State your position with evidence
Side B: 2 minutes — State your position with evidence
ROUND 2 — Rebuttals (4 min):
Side B: 2 minutes — Respond to Side A's arguments
Side A: 2 minutes — Respond to Side B's arguments
ROUND 3 — Closing Statements (4 min):
Side A: 2 minutes — Summarize your strongest arguments
Side B: 2 minutes — Summarize your strongest arguments
DEBRIEF (1 min):
- Strongest argument from each side
- Key moment that shifted the debate
- Areas for improvement
Scoring and Feedback
Debate Scoring Rubric
DEBATE SCORING RUBRIC:
CATEGORY | SCORE (1-10) | NOTES
----------------------------|-------------|------
CONTENT (40%):
Evidence quality | ___/10 |
Argument logic | ___/10 |
Depth of analysis | ___/10 |
Counterargument handling | ___/10 |
DELIVERY (30%):
Clarity of expression | ___/10 |
Organization/structure | ___/10 |
Pacing and time management| ___/10 |
STRATEGY (30%):
Clash (engaging opponent) | ___/10 |
Weighing (why your args matter more) | ___/10 |
Framing (controlling the narrative) | ___/10 |
TOTAL: ___/100
STRENGTHS:
1. [What worked well]
2. [What worked well]
AREAS FOR IMPROVEMENT:
1. [Specific improvement with example]
2. [Specific improvement with example]
RECOMMENDED PRACTICE:
- [Specific drill or exercise]
Self-Assessment After Practice
POST-DEBATE SELF-ASSESSMENT:
Did I...
[ ] State my position clearly in the first 30 seconds?
[ ] Support each claim with specific evidence?
[ ] Address my opponent's strongest arguments (not just weak ones)?
[ ] Avoid logical fallacies in my own reasoning?
[ ] Identify fallacies in my opponent's reasoning?
[ ] Manage my time effectively (not rushing or running out)?
[ ] Stay calm and composed under pressure?
[ ] Use signposting ("First... Second... Therefore...")?
[ ] Conclude with a clear summary of why I win?
My strongest moment: _______________
My weakest moment: _______________
One thing I'll practice next time: _______________
Practice Drills
Drill: Argue Both Sides
EXERCISE: ARGUE BOTH SIDES
Topic: [Choose a debatable topic]
STEP 1: Write the strongest 3-point argument FOR the position (5 min)
1. [Argument + evidence]
2. [Argument + evidence]
3. [Argument + evidence]
STEP 2: Write the strongest 3-point argument AGAINST the position (5 min)
1. [Argument + evidence]
2. [Argument + evidence]
3. [Argument + evidence]
STEP 3: Identify which side has the stronger case and WHY (2 min)
Stronger side: ___
Key reason: ___
BENEFIT: Forces you to understand both perspectives deeply
Drill: Rapid Rebuttal
EXERCISE: 60-SECOND REBUTTALS
Read the following argument, then respond in 60 seconds:
Argument: "[Statement to rebut]"
Your rebuttal must include:
1. Acknowledge the point (avoid straw man)
2. Identify the flaw (evidence, logic, or significance)
3. Present your counter with evidence
4. Explain why your counter matters more
Timer: 60 seconds. Go.
See Also