Judge Philosophies
Adrian Cohan - Mount Vernon
Alayna Becker - Ferris
n/a
Aly Hoover - Sehome
n/a
Andre Cossette - Gonzaga Prep
<p> I've been judging Policy, LD, and now Public Forum for 30 years or more. I hate Kritiks that are used just to win rounds, unless they're Kritiks criticizing the state of debate these days. They have to be read slowly for me to understand them, though: philosophy read at 400 words per minute just goes over my head (I have enough trouble understanding philosophy read at 100 words per minute). As I advance in age, my ability to process information at a rapid rate diminishes, so if you can boil the round down to a few simple principles, then I become a thinking judge instead of a judge who merely connects points on the flow. I like to hear evidence being read, so sometimes I'll slow down debaters when they read their cards so I can understand the warrants and not just mindlessly write down the taglines. I have a decent knowledge of theory because debate theory rarely changes over the years (sometimes the names of the arguments change but the logic stays the same), so if you use words like "conditionality" and "permutation" and "reciprocity", I'd know what you were talking about. </p> <p> And, I usually don't disclose (except for Novices who might benefit from some education), and I don't like shaking hands with the debaters after the round.</p>
Andrew Buchan - Jefferson
n/a
Andrew Myers - Mead
Andy Ridgeway - Highland
<p> </p> <div> <!-- google_ad_section_start --></div> <div> </div> <div class="WikiCustomNav WikiElement wiki"> </div> <!-- google_ad_section_end --><div class="alignCenter"> </div> <p> <!-- /leftcolumn --></p> <div id="rightcolumn"> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" id="container"> <tbody> <tr> <td class="width8"> <img alt="" class="corner" height="8" src="http://www.wikispaces.com/_/x8428xqq/i/bTL.gif" width="8" /></td> <td class="field" colspan="2" style="border-top-color: rgb(170, 170, 170); border-top-width: 1px; border-top-style: solid;"> <img alt="" class="cornerImg" height="1" src="http://www.wikispaces.com/_/4k0z606x/i/c.gif" width="1" /></td> <td class="width8"> <img alt="" class="corner" height="8" src="http://www.wikispaces.com/_/73z846vv/i/bTR.gif" width="8" /></td> </tr> <tr> <td class="field" style="border-left-color: rgb(170, 170, 170); border-left-width: 1px; border-left-style: solid;"> <br /> </td> <td class="field" style="width: 100%;" valign="top"> <div class="contentBox"> <div class="innerContentBox"> <div class="MenuBar WikiControls"> <span class="PageTitle"><a href="http://judgephilosophies.wikispaces.com/Ridgeway%2C+Andrew">Ridgeway, Andrew</a></span> <div> <div class="ButtonPosition"> <div class="Buttons"> <a class="Button ButtonLeft disabled tipme" href="http://judgephilosophies.wikispaces.com/Ridgeway%2C+Andrew#" original-title="you do not have permission to edit this page"> </a></div> </div> <div class="MoreMenu"> </div> </div> </div> <textarea cols="1" id="autosaveContent" rows="1" style="display: none;"></textarea> <div id="autosavePrompt" style="display: none;"> </div> <div class="commentContainer"> <div class="wiki wikiPage" id="content_view"> <!-- google_ad_section_start --> <br /> I want to see you do whatever it is you do best, but I do have a handful of things that I constantly seem to find myself saying to high school debaters: <br /> <br /> <ul> <li> I prefer to listen to a handful of well developed arguments than to dozens of poorly explained arguments.</li> <li> I'd rather listen to a debater who is smart than listen to a debater who is fast.</li> <li> "Extinction" is not a tag.</li> <li> Just because you <em>can</em> say something doesn't mean you <em>should</em>.</li> <li> If you can't explain your kritik to your parents, you haven't researched it enough and you probably shouldn't run it in front of me.</li> <li> I don't understand your acronyms.</li> <li> Some things just aren't funny. Know where to draw the line.</li> <li> Don't interrupt your partner.</li> <li> If you know you'll never go for a particular argument in the 2NR, don't include it in the 1NC.</li> <li> Don't be rude or condescending towards your opponents.</li> <li> Cross-examination is a speech. It should proceed according to a strategy.</li> <li> Don't impact turn things that are obviously terrible.</li> <li> Don't forget to ask me about the SCuFI.</li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> </div> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div>
Ann Osborne - Sehome
n/a
Annie Capestany - Walla Walla
<p>I am an assistant coach and this is my 5th year judging. I don't like theory, speed or jargon. But I do like logic and reasonable arguments. Remember, it is your job to persuade me. If you go so fast that I can't understand your arguments, you lose. (I will put down my pen and cross my arms if you go too fast. You should slow down if you want to win.) Please roadmap and follow the flow. I won't start the timer until after your roadmap (if any). You can use your own timers too. I give hand signals. I don't disclose.</p>
Ashley Skinner - Tahoma High
n/a
Ashley Berman - CapitalID
Ben Lykins - Crescent Valley
n/a
Bill Wagstaff - Mead
Brad Thew - Central Valley Hig
<p>I’ve coached LD for about eight years, most significantly at Central Valley High School in Washington, and I coached the 2010 Washington State 4A LD champ. Although I don’t like the implications that often come with the phrase “traditional judge,” that is probably the best way to describe myself judging. I try to check my opinions at the door and keep it tab. However, I only understand what I’m capable of understanding, and I’m not always up to date on the most recent trends in LD. I rely on my flow, and if it isn’t on there, it isn’t evaluated. <strong>Make clear extensions as a result</strong>. I really like real world debates with logical argumentation.<br /> <br /> Framework- I work best in rounds that operate with a traditional framework. Generally this means a V/VC, but I can deal with an advantage/standard as long as you link into it. I don’t think that plans are necessary, and I don’t know that I like them because honestly I don’t hear them often enough in an LD context to really have an opinion yet. Honestly, I have reservations about plans because I think the structure of an LD resolution does not necessitate a plan, but I believe that they have the <em>potential</em> to operate effectively. At the point an affirmative has ran a plan, it is acceptable for the NC to present a CP.<br /> <br /> Presentation/Speaker Points- I can handle <strong>moderate</strong> speed. I will say slow/clear if necessary. I’m not used to people particularly caring about the speaker points I award, but I generally stay in the range of 27. I like hearing what a card says, and I don’t like having to card call after a round. Be explicit in your signposting. Tags need to be super clear. Don’t be rude or deceptive. Try to be helpful and cordial in round. Humor is a plus, as rounds can get stale as tournaments drag on, but don’t take it too far. If/when I disclose, don’t bicker with me. Doing these things equals good speaker points, and I’ll try to compare you to what I’ve seen recently.<br /> <br /> Theory- I’m not the biggest fan of theory debate, but I understand the growing necessity of it. Do not run theory just because you feel like it, do it because there is a genuine need to correct a wrong. You need to be super clear in the structure of the argument, and it needs to be shelled properly. I need to know what sort of violation has occurred, and I need to understand its implication. Don’t use it as a time suck. Philosophically, I’m ok with RVI’s. I default to drop the argument, not the debater, and I default to reasonability over competing interps. I don’t want theory to be a strategy to win.<br /> <br /> Kritiks- I’m not a fan of critical positions. I know a bit about philosophy, but not everything. You don’t know me though, and you don’t know how much I know, and I can’t guarantee that you can tell me everything I need to know about Derrida or Foucault in 6-7 minutes in order to evaluate an argument properly. I feel that the greatest flaw of the k is that it requires so much preexisting knowledge on the part of me the judge, your competition, and yourself to be of any substantive value in the round. Most debaters really aren’t up to the task, and even if they are, the time constraints inherent in an LD round make it tough to evaluate properly. I like the <em>idea</em> of a k, but in reality, it just doesn’t work.<br /> <br /> Miscellaneous-<br /> <br /> 1- Flex: You need to use CX for questions. Do what you want with your prep. Don’t abuse flex. This will effect speaks.<br /> 2- I don’t care if you sit or stand. You’ll speak better if you stand though.<br /> 3- If you are paperless, I will time flashing. I don’t want to wait around forever.<br /> 4- You should be pre-flowed before the round.<br /> 5- Don’t be smug.<br /> 6- I constantly flow. I generally flow by hand. If I stop flowing, it means I’m lost and trying to figure out where you are, or that you’re going too fast, or that you’re just rehashing old material. In any case, it’s probably not a good thing.<br /> <strong>7-</strong> <strong>If I didn’t mention a type of argument, I probably have no idea what it means. Don’t run it. Or ask me first. I’m not stupid, I promise. I just coach in a place where I don’t have to think very hard.</strong></p>
Brandi Hunt - Bridge
Brandon Weedon - Centennial-ID
n/a
Brian Brantley - Highland
Brittany Esbenshade - Mount Vernon
n/a
Brooke Thompson - Davis
n/a
Brooke Bouchey - Walla Walla
Bryan Rich - Mtn Home
n/a
Cameron Nilles - Sam Barlow
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gte mso 10]> <style> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Cambria; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-language:JA;} </style> <![endif]--><!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal"> I believe that the debaters ultimately frame the debate round. I am open to all types of arguments and styles of debate. Tell me explicitly how you want the round to be framed and weighed and then in the closing speeches debate that issue well. Speed is fine, be clear on the tags.<o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> Topicality: It is a procedural and I will evaluate it first, unless otherwise told not to. Typically I believe there is some sort of T argument to be had in most debates, done well I can definitely pull the trigger on T. I also recognize its strategic advantages beyond just winning, so RVIs are not that compelling of arguments for me.<o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> K: I am less likely to vote on the K because many times the debate degenerates into the K team having a non-specific link, and a poor alternative. I will default into a policy framework but if there is good argumentation not to then I can evaluate that.<o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> DA/CP: This is a very effective way for the negative to gain leverage in the debate, use them well.<o:p></o:p></p> <p> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-fareast-font-family: "ï¼ï¼³ 明æœ";mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast;mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language: JA;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">Theory: Most debates fall back onto reading shells and pre-written answers, if this is what you are going for make sure it is argued well, I am opening to hearing all theory arguments.</span><!--EndFragment--></p>
Capri Holden - Central Valley Hig
<p>I have been judging debate for over 10 years. I believe in a traditional values debate. Above all else the value should be held paramount. . . AND. . . Contentions that clearly connect back to the value criterion are essential in proving the resolution to be true/false.</p>
Carla Gudenkauf - Eastside Catholic
n/a
Charlie Potter - Mount Vernon
n/a
Chelsea Dugin - Mount Vernon
Chris Coovert - Gig Harbor
<p>Chris Coovert,<br /> Coach, Gig Harbor HS, Gig Harbor WA<br /> Coached LD: 17 years<br /> Coached CX: 12 years<br /> Competed in LD: 4 years<br /> Competed in NPDA: 2 years<br /> <br /> <br /> <strong>LD Paradigm</strong>: I have been competing in, judging and coaching Lincoln Douglas debate for over twenty years. I have seen a lot of changes, some good, some not so good. This is what you should know<a href="http://wiki.cgm.ucdavis.edu/groups/mah01/wiki/5dbc6/All_about_lego.html">.</a><br /> <br /> I will evaluate the round based on the framework provided by the debaters. The affirmative needs to establish a framework (usually a value and criterion) and then show why based on the framework, the resolution is true. The negative should either show why the resolution is not true under that framework or provide a competing framework which negates. My stock paradigm is what most people now call truth testing: the aff's burden is to prove the resolution true and the negatives is to prove it false. I will default to this absent another framework being established in the round. If both debaters agree that I should evaluate as a policymaker, I am able to do that and will. If you both put me in some other mode, that is reasonable as well. If there is an argument, however, between truth testing and another way of looking at the round the higher burden of proof will be on the debater attempting the shift away from truth testing.<br /> <br /> As far as specific arguments go.<br /> <br /> 1. I find topicality arguments generally do not apply in Lincoln Douglas debate. If the affirmative is not dealing with the resolution, then they are not meeting their burden to prove the resolution true. This is the issue, not artificial education or abuse standards. I have voted on T in the past, but I think there are more logical ways to approach these arguments.<br /> 2. I find the vast majority of theory arguments to be very poorly run bastardizations of policy theory that do not really apply to LD.<br /> 3. I have a strong, strong, bias against debaters using theory shells as their main offensive weapon in rounds when the other debater is running stock, predictable cases. I am open to theory arguments against abusive positions, but I want you to debate the resolution, not how we should debate.<br /> 4. You need to keep site of the big picture. Impact individual arguments back to framework.<br /> <br /> Finally, I am a flow judge. I will vote on the arguments. That said, I prefer to see debaters keep speeds reasonable, especially in the constructives. You don’t have to be conversational, but I want to be able to make out individual words and get what you are saying. It is especially important to slow down a little bit when reading lists of framework or theory arguments that are not followed by cards. I will tell you if you are unclear.<br /> <br /> <strong>CX Paradigm</strong><br /> I have not judged very much CX lately, but I still do coach it and judge it occasionally. I used to consider myself a policy maker, but I am probably open enough to critical arguments that this is not completely accurate anymore. At the same time, I am not Tab. I don't think any judge truly is. I do enter the room with some knowledge of the world and I have a bias toward arguments that are true and backed by logic.<br /> <br /> In general:<br /> 1. I will evaluate the round by comparing impacts unless you convince me to do otherwise.<br /> 2. I am very open to K's that provide real alternatives and but much less likely to vote on a K that provides no real alt.<br /> 3. If you make post-modern K arguments at mock speed and don't explain them to me, do not expect me to do the work for you.<br /> 4. I tend to vote on abuse stories on T more than competing interpretations.<br /> 5. I really hate theory debates. Please try to avoid them unless the other team leaves you no choice.<br /> 6. The way to win my ballot is to employ a logical, coherent strategy and provide solid comparison of your position to your opponents.<br /> <br /> I am able to flow fairly quickly, but I don't judge enough to keep up with the fastest teams. If I tell you to be clear or slow down please listen.</p>
Chuck Hamaker-Teals - Southridge WA
<p>I am the coach for Southridge High School in eastern Washington. I competed in high school debate in the 90s. I've been coaching for 18 years. Each topic has lots of ground, find it and bring the arguments into the round. Be polite and kind. Rude debaters almost never win. I can flow relatively quickly but will punish debaters’ speaks if they are unclear or unprepared. I try to vote on the flow, although I don't like Topicality run without forethought. I am not a fan of the kritik but I will vote for one. I don't mind theory arguments, I just need to be clearly told how the impact relates to what is happening in the round. I vote on issues where I can clearly see the impact in the round. I like clear, fast, well organized debates with lots of good arguments and lots of impacts. When I sit on out round panels, my decisions are very similar to those of current college debaters, not communication judges. Arguments about sources are tiresome and I am more persuaded by rationale or meta-analysis. </p>
Corey Taylor - MVHS
n/a
Craig Handy - Mtn Home
n/a
Dan McShane - Bellingham
Danielle Robertson - Corvallis
n/a
Danny Cantrell - Adm
n/a
Dave Holland - Mtn Home
n/a
David Weed - Mtn Home
n/a
Debbie Greco - Highland
Dix Felker - Mount Vernon
n/a
Donna Boudreau - Central Valley Hig
Dylan Mariani - Mercer Island
Elaine Hall - Newport
Eli Mallon - Annie Wright
n/a
Erin Liddicoat - BC ACADEMY
n/a
Fred Moore - Walla Walla
Garrett Shiroma - AVI
n/a
Griffin Bell - Tahoma High
Heidi Brigham - Walla Walla
Irina Ogadjanian - AVI
n/a
Jaime Holguin - Gig Harbor
<p>Version:1.0 StartHTML:0000000183 EndHTML:0000005304 StartFragment:0000002721 EndFragment:0000005268 SourceURL:file://localhost/Users/coov/Downloads/Jaime%20judge%20paradigm.doc</p> <p>Two years of high school policy debate, will be my fourth year of judging.</p> <p>Delivery: I am fine with speed but Tags and Analysis needs to be slower than warrants of carded evidence.</p> <p> </p> <p>Topicality: T wise I have a very high threshold. I will generally not vote down an Aff on potential abuse. The Aff does need to put effort into the T debate as a whole though. If you don't, I will vote on T because this is a position that an Aff should be ready to face every round.</p> <p> </p> <p>Framework: I need the debaters to be the ones who give me the reasons to accept or reject a FW. Debaters also need to explain to me how the FW instructs me the judge to evaluate the round, otherwise I have to ask for the FW after round just to know how to evaluate the round which I don't like doing or I have to intervene with my own interpretation of FW.</p> <p> </p> <p>Kritiks: As far as Kritiks go, I also have a high threshold. I will not assume anything about Ks. You must do the work on the link and alt level. Don't just tell me to reject the 1AC and that it somehow solves for the impacts of the K. I need to get strong analysis of the warranted evidence of the neg to vote for a reject alt.</p> <p> </p> <p>Counterplan: If you show how the CP is a better policy than the Aff, I will vote for it.</p> <p> </p> <p>Theory: No matter what the theory argument is, I have a high threshold on it for being an independent reason to vote down a team. More often so long as argumentation for it is good, I will reject the argument not the team.</p> <p> </p> <p>For both teams I will say this, a well thought out Impact Calc goes a long way to getting my ballot signed in your favor. Be clear and explain why your impacts outweigh. Don't make me connect the dots for you. If you need clarification feel free to ask me before the round.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>
Jane Rearden - Newport
n/a
Janice keller - Squalicum
n/a
Jason Woehler - Federal Way
n/a
Jean Tobin - Walla Walla
<p>This is my 7th year coaching LD debate. I am familiar with the topics when I judge but not always prepared for unusual arguments, so be sure to clearly explain link/impacts if the argument is outside the norm.<br /> <br /> I'm comfortable with speed. I will say "speed" if you are speaking too fast for me to flow or understand.<br /> <br /> I am relatively new to theory arguments, so you should probably slow down on them and make sure they are not too blippy. I'm like logic and consider debate to be a game so theory (especially T) is interesting to me but I don’t like to punish people for their arguments. I prefer it if theory impacts make sense and are logical in the round - such as drop the argument, as opposed to drop the debater. However, that is only my default position. If you argue drop the debater well in the round, I will vote on it.<br /> <br /> I don't like sexist or racist arguments and I won't vote for them if they are obviously offensive, even if they are dropped. <br /> <br /> I try not to make arguments for debaters. Your arguments should be well supported and explained. It is your job to explain the argument in a way that is straight forward and clear. In particular, I do not like extremely odd value/criteria debates where the evidence seems designed to confuse, not explain. And if you are not able to clearly explain your value/criteria/k in c-x, I will not vote for it. I value debaters understanding each other's arguments and responding to them effectively - I see a lot of discussion about disclosure as it applies to evidence but not much about honest disclosure in c-x. <br /> <br /> I do convey my opinion on arguments through facial expressions - so if I think you are spending too much time on an argument I will show that visually and if I like an argument I will show that visually.<br /> <br /> I will vote on value and criteria arguments, but I love case arguments that have clear impacts that relate back to value and criteria. I like impacts to be identified and weighed in final arguments. I'm much more a policy judge than a traditional LD judge. <br /> <br /> I do view debate as a game, I'm open to most arguments, I think debate is fluid and debaters are allowed to define and create the game as they go so long as their support for doing so is strong and valid. However, I don't like rudeness. Overwhelmingly for me that is defined as a debater responding to another debater (or more rarely, me) in a condescending manner. But rudeness only affects your speaker points.<br /> <br /> I like clear, consice, fast, organized debating. I think I generally give higher speaker points (I feel bad when I go below a 27 and will usually give a 30 at least once a tournament). I don't need tons of persuasion vocally - it isn't a performance, but I love and reward clear, intellectual persuasion with high speaker points.</p>
Jennifer Swan - BC ACADEMY
Jeremy Gradwahl - Walla Walla
Jess Inskeep - Timberline
Jessica Barkl - Walla Walla
Jim Dorsey - Vashon
n/a
Joel Clements - MVHS
n/a
John Turner - Jefferson
n/a
John Julian Sr - Newport
<p> Overall - The team who makes my job easiest, the side who walks me through their logic and makes complete, warranted, and comprehensible arguments is the team most likely to win my ballot. The harder I have to work to fill in details on your behalf, the less likely it is that you will win.</p> <p> a priori -> DECORUM is the supreme a priori voter. Treat one another as colleagues. Respect is your code word. Rudeness is not equal with aggression - you can be the latter without being the former. Being a jerk does not show strength... it shows you're a jerk.</p> <p> Event Specific:</p> <p> CX - I am a stock issues judge. I will accept Kritiks as long as Aff Case properly bites it and the logic is solidly established. I enjoy a good Counterplan. Speed at your own risk... clarity is preferred. If I'm not writing, you're going too fast.</p> <p> LD - I am an old school values debate judge. I expect a proper framework (Value is the ideal your case upholds, Criterion is the weighing mechanism for the round). If you choose to take a non-traditional V/C or framework option, explain it to me well enough that I can actually do something with it. Speed is a very bad idea in LD - Consider me a Comm judge with a flow pad. Jargon doesn't impress me in LD. Logic, rhetoric, deep philosophy, and passion do.</p> <p> PF - Public Forum is intended to appeal to a wide audience. It is patterned after a TV show. I don't flow when I watch TV... don't expect a rigorous flow in PF from me. Convince me of your overall point of view is valid. Do so by making logical, well constructed arguments. You can leverage common knowledge if it is truly common. Pathos > logos in this event.</p> <p> Underview - Decorum, then logic, then rhetoric, then appeal to my preferences. Do this, and you're golden. Both sides doing this is Nirvana. I haven't been in a state of Nirvana in 15 years. Make the effort anyway.</p>
John Wong - Walla Walla
John petti - Mtn Home
n/a
Josh Petersen - Tahoma High
Josh Myhre - Tualatin
n/a
Julia Seidman - Mercer Island
Karen Rossman - Eastside Catholic
n/a
Kari DeMarco - Wenatchee
n/a
Karissa Smith - Tahoma High
n/a
Katie Lien - Southridge WA
Kerry Bergus - Gig Harbor
Kim Hooser - Sam Barlow
Kramer Hudgens - Bridge
<p> </p> <blockquote> </blockquote> <blockquote>I prefer to work off the flow, in a substantive way. I don't think mass argumentation that is quickly and poorly developed holds as much weight as focused argumentation. Focus the round for me and then tell me why specific issues are important not just that you are winning more issues.<br /> <br /> I'm fine with speed and theoretical argumentation, although I feel that theory requires more backing and a clear presentation of violation before it is valid.<br /> <br /> Clarity is key</blockquote>
Kris Cruz - Renaissance
Kyle Kimball - Mercer Island
Lacey Gerback - Highland
Lauren Maher - Ferris
n/a
Lee Troxler - Centennial-ID
n/a
Lindsay VanLuvanee - Pocatello High
n/a
Lindsey McBride - Highland
Lisa Rearden - Newport
Lois Gorne - Federal Way
n/a
Lori Smith - Renaissance
Luke Felt - CapitalID
Luke Dolge - Gig Harbor
Mandy Manning - LC Tigers
n/a
Mary Ersland - Centennial-ID
n/a
Matea Ivanovic - Timberline
Matt Fedrizzi - Centennial-ID
n/a
Max Gobel - Boise High
Max Lord - Boise High
McKenna Shaw - MVHS
n/a
Michele Clements - MVHS
n/a
Mike Emberton - Newport
Mike Stovern - Mead
<p> </p> <p>I will follow my flow fairly closely, and I consider drops concessions, but please don't tell me that what your opponent dropped is a voter. Instead, tell me about the impact of that concession. Primarily, I will make my decisions based upon the quality of your voting issues when they are filtered through your value/criterion. Please give me voters that show impact and demonstrate an effective use of how your criterion upholds your value. Show me what the world is like under the side of the resolution that you are defending. I am willing to vote on anything as long as you can support it, or your opponent doesn’t discredit it.</p> <p> </p> <p>Your criterion should serve as a weighing mechanism and a means to uphold your value. All contentions should uphold your value unless you have a contention with the purpose of showing how the opposing side is immoral/impossible. Rebuttals should have no new evidence.</p> <p> </p> <p>Remember to roadmap and signpost. Feel free to speak quickly, but slow down on tag lines and be clear. Be polite; you are attacking a position not a person.</p>
Mitsu Gunsolus - Sehome
n/a
Nathan Everett - Ferris
n/a
Owen Zahorcak - S. Eugene
n/a
Paul Kanellopoulos - Saint George
Rebar Niemi - Bridge
Richard Zuercher - Renaissance
<p> Background:</p> <p> CX competitor for Centennial High School (Boise, ID) for 4 years</p> <p> CX competitor for the College of Idaho for 2 years</p> <p> Parli competitor for the College of Idaho for 1 year</p> <p> Asst Coach for the College of Idaho 3 years (Parli, IEs, IPDA)</p> <p> Head Coach for Renaissance High School for 4 years (CX, LD, PF, IEs)</p> <p> Philosophy:</p> <p> I am usually open to most arguments made in the debate and will leave the debaters the responsibility to both justify their own arguments and attack those of their opponents. Having said that, I evaluate arguments based both on how those arguments appear on the flow AND how those arguments persuade my thinking in the debate round. For instance, a neg team may drop a conditionality bad argument on the flow, but it may not be a voting issue because there was no demonstrable impact in the round. Just because the issue is dropped does not make the issue magically convincing - that work must still be done by the debaters. </p> <p> CX Issues:</p> <p> T is a voting issue unless proven otherwise in the round.</p> <p> SPEC arguments are not a-priori arguments unless proven otherwise in the round.</p> <p> CPs are legit unless proven otherwise in the round. I think Dispo is the most legit way to run a CP, but not necessarily the case. There are a variety of reasons to run CPs in a variety of ways. I don't tend to vote on theory issues unless there is actual in-round abuse. </p> <p> Ks are legit for aff and neg unless proven otherwise. I tent to vote on Ks when they are consistent with the neg strategy. Reading a Statism K while simultaneously running an agent CP seems to defeat the purpose of the criticism and damages your cred. It doesn't mean that I won't vote for it, it just means that you have to do some extra work justifying your contradiction. </p> <p> Impact Calc: I lean on probability before magnitude unless proven otherwise in the round. </p> <p> </p> <p> LD Issues:</p> <p> I am open to a variety of argumentation and strategy. </p> <p> I am most used to a value criterion debate, but I would love to see different strategies and theory.</p> <p> Ks are legit unless proven otherwise in the round.</p> <p> Plans are OK unless proven otherwise in the round.</p> <p> </p> <p> PF Issues:</p> <p> I am open to a variety of argumentation and strategy.</p> <p> I am most used to a straight-up fact round debate, but I would love to see different strategies and theory.</p> <p> Ks and other various arguments are legit unless proven otherwise in the round.</p> <p> </p> <p> Any other questions, just ask.</p>
Riki Wauchek - Walla Walla
Robyn Rose - Sam Barlow
Roger Copenhaver - Centennial-ID
n/a
Roger Copenhaver - Puyallup
Sally Conner - Central Valley Hig
<p>I have judged debate events for about 15 years, most frequently congress, with occasional LD and PF. I enjoy rounds that stay away from excessive jargon and debaters focus on clear communication. I think that the value is important in a LD round, and I think that evidence is important in a round, but that it is an even more important skill to focus on deciding what evidence is important to include in a round, and to explain the relevance of this information. I do not enjoy speed.</p>
Sam Normington - Saint George
<h2> <span style="background-color: rgb(175,238,238)"><span style="background-color: rgb(175,238,238)"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', 'serif'; font-size: 12pt; mso-fareast-font-family: calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-ansi-language: en-us; mso-fareast-language: en-us; mso-bidi-language: ar-sa"><font color="#000000" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-family: 'times new roman', 'serif'; font-size: 12pt; mso-fareast-font-family: calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-ansi-language: en-us; mso-fareast-language: en-us; mso-bidi-language: ar-sa">I competed in policy debate in high school and have been coaching all forms of debate the past ten years. I traditionally judge policy debate, so often find myself preferring its trappings.<br /> Speed, topicality, kritiks, are all fine by me, use them or don't, doesn't bother me. I will do my best to evaluate the round using the framework the debaters put forth. I like clash, and I like impact calculus. </span></font></span></span></span></h2>
Sam Mershon - Sam Barlow
Sam Wallace - Mtn Home
n/a
Sarah Sherry - Puyallup
<p>Coach since 1996 - started team at Clover Park High School (3 years) (Coach at Puyallup High School since 2000)<br /> Competed in high school and college - Policy, LD, Interp<br /> Charter Board member of The Women's Debate Institute<br /> <br /> General - (scale of 1-10) 1=low, 10 high<br /> Speed - 7ish - 8 if it's really clear<br /> Topicality - 3 - I have little regard for T, if you are going for it, it better be your only card on the table and the violation should be crystal clear.<br /> Kritical Arguments - depends - I'm very interested in language kritiques (hmmm . . . that may be a bit of a double turn on myself), but generally speaking I have little tolerance for po-mo philosophy - I think the vast majority of these authors are read by debaters only in the context of debate, without knowledge or consideration for their overall work. This makes for lopsided and, frankly, ridiculous debates with debaters arguing so far outside of the rational context as to make it clear as mud and a laughable interpretation of the original work. It's not that I am a super expert in philosophy, but rather a lit teacher and feel like there's something that goes against my teaching practice to buy into a shallow or faulty interpretation (all of those dreary hours of teacher torture working on close reading practices - sigh). Outside of that, I'm interested on a 7ish level.<br /> Framework - 9 - I'm all in favor of depth v. breadth and to evaluate the framework of a round or the arguments, I believe, can create a really interesting level of comparison.<br /> Theory - 8ish. While I'm generally fascinated, I can, very quickly be frustrated. I frequently feel that theory arguments are just "words on the page to debaters" - something that was bought on-line, a coach created for you, or one of the top teams at your school put together at camp. It quickly falls into the same category as po-mo K's for me.<br /> <br /> Just a me thing - not sure what else to label this, but I think that I should mention this. I struggle a lot with the multiple world's advocacy. I think that the negative team has the obligation to put together a cohesive strategy. I've had this explained to me, multiple times, it's not that I don't get it - I just disagree with it. So, if at some point this becomes part of your advocacy, know that you have a little extra work to do with me. It's easiest for my teams to explain my general philosophy, by simply saying that I am a teacher and I am involved with this activity bc of its educational value, not simply as a game. So go ahead and lump perf con in with the whole multiple worlds advocacy<br /> <br /> Ok, so my general paradigm is 1.) play nice. I hate when: debater are rude to their own partner, me, the other team. Yes, it is a competition - but there's nothing less compelling than someone whose bravado has pushed passed their ability (or pushed over their partner). Swagger is one thing, obnoxiousness is another. Be aware of your language (sexist, racist, or homophobic language will not be tolerated). 2.) Debate is a flexible game; the rules are ever changing. The way that I debated is dramatically different then the way that is debated today, versus the way that people will debate 20 years from now. I believe this requires me to be flexible in my paradigm/philosophy. However, I, also, believe that it is your game. I hate it when teams tell me over and over again what they believe that they are winning, but without any reference to their opponent’s positions or analysis as to why. Debate is more of a Venn diagram in my mind, than a "T-chart".<br /> <br /> I don't actually believe that anyone is "tabula rasa". I believe that when a judge says that, they are indicating that they will try to listen to any argument and judge it solely on the merits of the round. However, I believe that we all come to rounds with pre-conceived notions in our heads - thus we are never "tabula rasa". I will try my best to be a blank slate, but I believe that the above philosophy should shed light on my pre-conceived notions. It is your job as debaters, and not mine, to weigh out the round and leave me with a comparison and a framework for evaluation.</p>
Seth Vick - CapitalID
<p> </p> <div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; "> Tabula Rasa (default to policy maker if you don't put me in another paradigm)</div> <div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; "> Speed is fine, slowing down on tags is helpful for flowing</div> <div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; "> Theory is fine, I default to competing interpretations unless you argue otherwise</div> <div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; "> Kritiks are fine, just be prepared to do the work</div> <div style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; "> As my paradigm shows, I'm pretty much prepared to handle whatever you want to throw at me. I debated for Capital High School 05-07, and have judged constantly since then. I'm big on impact analysis, if you want me to vote for you then the best way to accomplish that is to give me the whole story about why aff advantages outweigh negative impacts or vice versa. Slow down on tag lines and citations to make sure that I get the complete idea, I don't mind if you buzz through the card as long as you're understandable. Other than that, it's your round.</div>
Shelby Cook - Bridge
Shelly Reed - Timberline
n/a
Shirley McLaughlin - Walla Walla
Susan Mohn - GPS
n/a
Susie Rangel - Sam Barlow
Taylor Reynolds - Puyallup
Tim Harper - Gonzaga Prep
<p> <strong class="_36"><a data-hovercard="/ajax/hovercard/hovercard.php?id=1450020135" href="http://www.facebook.com/tim.harper.359" id="js_1">Tim Harper</a></strong></p> <div class="_53" id="id.255042037952260"> <div class="_3hi"> <div class="_1yr"> </div> <div class="_38 direction_ltr"> <p> Judging philosophy:</p> <p> Experience: I have been debating for 6 years – Three for Ashland High School and three for Gonzaga. I am a senior and captain of the Gonzaga debate team. I have 20+ rounds of experience on this year’s topic.</p> <p> Preferences:</p> <p> General: <br /> I default to an offense-defense paradigm.<br /> I don’t think a conceded argument automatically constitutes a win—you must explain the arguments you want me to evaluate and extrapolate why I should do so. why do I care and what does it mean to the rest of the debate? That said, concessions are tie-breakers. <br /> I will read evidence. Most likely, I will read lots of it. However putting evidence in my hands means I will give it only as much weight as it deserves and not necessarily as much as you tell me it does. Make sure if you tell me to read a card that you are willing to stake the debate on it being as good as you think it is.<br /> I reward concise, articulate, well-reasoned arguments over pedantic soap boxing. With this in mind, you will be well served to remove filler phrases from your vocabulary – “pull the trigger,” “at the point where,” “extend across the flow” etc, etc… <br /> If you could choose to be funny or be smart and professional while debating in front of me, I prefer the latter.</p> <p> CP: I will accept a lens of sufficiency for evaluating counterplans and believe the aff must win a large risk of a solvency deficit, permutation or disadvantage to the counterplan to win a debate against a counterplan that resolves a large portion of the aff. <br /> I am not adverse to conditions, multi-plank advantage, process, or consultation counterplans. <br /> Theory arguments except conditionality are a reason to reject the team unless persuasively proven otherwise.</p> <p> DA: I think a DA that turns the whole case can outweigh the whole aff without substantive case defense, but you are well suited to cover your bases and sufficiently mitigate aff advantages to be safe. <br /> For the aff, I will vote on terminal defense on a disadvantage, however because I default to offense-defense, the threshold for winning zero risk of the DA is somewhat higher than winning some risk of offense, especially if there is a counterplan that solves all of the aff.<br /> Impact calculus should not be ignored – it can often be the tie-breaker in close case v. disad debates.</p> <p> Topicality: I will default to competing interpretations but will usually lean aff unless the T argument is particularly compelling or the affirmative is very obviously non- or anti-topical.</p> <p> Kritik: Although I am not a K debater, I increasingly find myself voting for K teams because highschool debaters largely do not a) understand or b) forward a framework argument. <br /> That said, I will likely understand and simultaneously detest your kritik. If you think your opponent is smart enough to read my philosophy (an admittedly unlikely proposition) and therefore decide to go for framework, you are likely in a less-than-desirable position.</p> <p> I will evaluate alternatives in the following manner—It will either need to establish a competing role of the ballot through which I should view the alternative, or I will default to assuming it operates within the same worldview of the aff and therefore should be able to outweigh or solve those competing impacts.</p> </div> </div> </div>