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Why Debate?

While debate clearly helps students improve their public speaking skills, research also indicates that students who participate in urban debate leagues are significantly less likely to drop out of high school, more likely to graduate on time, and more likely to be college ready. In fact, urban debaters are more than three times more likely to graduate from high school than their non-debating counterparts. On all sections of the ACT, urban debaters outscore their non-debating counterparts, with the most notable gains seen in the English and reading sections of the ACT.

 

Debate also improves academic achievement, irrespective of the GPA of the student prior to joining the program. In other words, it is not simply that urban debate leagues attract only high achieving students. Rather, one of the benefits of participating in a debate league is demonstrably higher academic performance over time. Urban debate participants complete high school with an average cumulative GPA of 3.23, above the 3.0 GPA benchmark considered by academicians to be predictive of college readiness.[1] In contrast, the average GPA of students who do not debate is 2.83, which is below the college readiness standard.

 

Debate cultivates key proficiencies such as effective written and oral communication, critical thinking, working in a collaborative environment, and civic awareness and participation.[2] Because debate crosses curricular boundaries, it similarly compels students to investigate the multitude of connections between the social, political, and environmental dimensions of society.[3] The intensive investigation and research urban debaters conduct places them at a distinct advantage in higher education environments and the workforce. Most remarkably, regardless of students’ reasons for joining urban debate leagues, the academic and social advantages experienced by students continue long after they leave the podium to join the ranks of other former debaters as leaders in industry, education, law, medicine, and other disciplines.

 

Sources:

[1] Mezuk, B., Bondarenko, I., Smith, S., & Tucker, E. (2011). Impact of participating in a policy debate program on academic achievement: Evidence from the Chicago Urban Debate League. Educational Research and Reviews, 6(9), 622-635.

[2] Duncan, A. (2012). The Power of Debate—Building the Five “C’s” for the 21st Century. US Department of Education. Available at: http://www.ed.gov/news/speeches/power-debate%E2%80%94building-five-cs-21st-century

[3]Bellon, J. (2000). A research-based justification for debate across the curriculum. Argumentation and Advocacy, 36(3), 161-176.

Key To Success

Impact Across Nationally

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- Academic Impact in Chicago: Debaters are 40% more likely to graduate, and this increases to 70% for African American boys. This study also found that after two years in debate Latino students were able to close the GPA gap with white students, and that the average ACT score for participants moved from 16 to 22.
- Impact in Baltimore Middle Schools: A 10 year longitudinal study of Baltimore urban debaters found that middle school debaters gain an average 6.35 point  increase in Grade 8 standardized test reading scores. Debate participation was also associated with an increase in the probability of attending selective high schools when compared to non-debater peers (Shackleford, 2019).
Conference

Mission

The Louisiana Urban Debate League (LUDL) makes competitive debate education available to Louisiana Public Schools so that all students have the opportunity to reach their full potential as engaged learners, critical thinkers, and capable civic advocates.

Vision

LUDL looks to provide an outlet for young men and women to find their voice and become an advocate for themselves, their community, and their society.

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