“The Words of Worlds Series”
A blog dedicated to anything and everything related to the Worlds Schools circuit.

Responding to Arguments: A Student Perspective

TFA Introduces A New Schedule for WSD Motions

October 27th Weekend: Christopher Columbus, Southlake Carroll, Velásquez, and Dripping Springs Secure the Ws

Oct 20th Weekend: Tompkins, Flower Mound, Grand Oaks, and Dripping Springs Take Home Big Wins

Last Batch of TX Motions: Covering Secession, Unions, and Political Advertising

Turning the tides: Don’t let the growing wave of World Schools change it

Harvard Westlake wins the Heart of Texas Invitational

Greenhill wins the Newman Smith Invitational & Coppell Classic

“Gene-Editing, Nuclear Energy, Art…Oh My!”: Analyzing More of the Texas 1st Semester Topics.

World Schools Debate: A Fusion of Forensics

Reveling in rhetoric: How speakers can savor style in World Schools

Team USA Wins The 2023 Greenhill Invitational

The World of Debating Beyond World Schools

The Results Are In: Flower Mound wins the 2023 Grapevine Classic!

TFA Announces 2023-2024’s Team Texas Lineup

Tackling the TX Season Opener Motions: Citizen Journalism, Vouchers, Judiciaries, and Palau

Breaking the Mold: Reevaluating the Need for a Third Substantive Argument
Whether it’s during the stressful hour before an impromptu round or while writing cases weeks in advance for a prepared round, most World Schools debaters are quite accustomed to racking their brains for a third argument. Various ideas float around but are ultimately rejected because the warranting is too similar to the first two arguments. This then begs the question: Are third substantive arguments truly necessary in World Schools Debate?

The National Speech & Debate Association Announces the 2023-2024 National Team

To be or not to be the chameleon: The benefits of being versatile in speeches rather than specializing
“A pile of gibberish.
If I had to sum up how my first speech ever went, that would be exactly what I would say. I sounded out incoherent words with my tongue. As I closed out my speech, I peered at my stopwatch.
I had 1 minute and 38 seconds to spare. It was like belly flopping into a swimming pool without knowing how to swim. But, the great thing about starting from nowhere is that you have the potential to get anywhere.
So, I braced myself and jumped into that pool. Again. And again. And again.”

The Case for World Schools Debate & The WoW Institute
If World Schools is truly about the global citizen, why do we have so many financial and social barriers when it comes to achieving success in it?