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The weblog http://1stpropinthefinal.blogspot.com should be included as an external link on this page. It is an account of the World Universities Debating Championships. Although Wikipedia guidelines reccomend against referencin blogs it is not an absolute ban. There are a number of reasons I think this source should be included.

1. It is not a "diary" type blog, the author used the blogger tool to record and publish results, motions etc in real time for debators who were not at the world championships.

2. The author is an authoriative source on debating having twice been a quarter finalist at the Championships and the previous year's convenor. He will be deputy Chief Adjudicator for the 2008 Championships.

3. Although it does include some light hearted comments it is largely a factual account of what happened.

4. There are many comments praising it for it's quality.

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I just noticed that a link to one of the oldest debate websites, which was originally added by [1], had been removed by an IP editor [2]. I have now restored the link. Please discuss removals of such long-standing content in the talk page before attempting to remove in the future. Radjenef (talk) 20:36, 9 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

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Variations?

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I've been editing this article a bit recently. I have a question about these two sentences:

"Speeches are usually five to seven minutes in duration."

"Depending on the country, there are variations in speaking time, speaking order, whether proposition whip can introduce new points, and the number of speakers."

  • Is there any circuit where five-minute BP is standard? My experience has always been that seven-minute BP is the standard in university debating, while five-minute BP is a reduced format used in (for example) novice or school tournaments. If this is generally the case everywhere, then the first sentence should probably be changed to reflect that, rather than conveying the impression that speaking time routinely varies.
  • Are there circuits where there are variations in "speaking order" and "the number of speakers"? That seems like quite a major deviation that would constitute a different format entirely, rather than just a variation of BP.

Of course, I'm not familiar with the norms in all circuits, and would welcome anyone providing info on circuits where these variations do occur (and are considered BP rather than a separate format). If these don't exist, I think these sentences should probably be amended. Does anyone have any thoughts? Helpful Cat (talk) 15:31, 12 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]

More role explanantions?

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I don't know, but should I add more role explanations? Only the wip speeches isn't enough for the role explanations. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Joseph092111 (talkcontribs) 13:28, 30 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]