Bates debate ranks fifth in nation, including key win at Yale Inter-Varsity Tournament
On weekends throughout the fall, the Brooks Quimby Debate Council has sent teams across the Northeast to compete against the country’s — and in many cases the world’s — best debaters. The results? Judge for yourself:
- As an entire team, Bates now ranks fifth overall in the American Parliamentary Debate Association standings, trailing only Yale, Harvard, Brandeis and Rutgers.
- The team of Matthew Summers ’15 of Short Hills, N.J., and Taylor Blackburn ’15 of Atherton, Calif., is third-ranked in the country. “This is an enormous accomplishment, considering there are around 100 teams at any given tournament,” said Jan Hovden, director of debate and lecturer in rhetoric.
- BQDC president Jac Stewart ’14 of Keene, N.H., and Blackburn teamed up to win the highly competitive Yale Inter-Varsity Debate Tournament in early October.
- Blackburn is the 10th-ranked varsity individual speaker in the U.S.
- Zoe Seaman-Grant ’17 of Brooklyn, N.Y, and Matthew Kahn ’17 of Newington, Conn., are the first- and third-ranked novice individual speakers in the U.S.
- Even before snow hit campus or the cider machine left Commons, debaters Blackburn, Summers and Stewart already qualified for the APDA national championship tournament in April 2014 at the University of Pennsylvania.
At the Yale tournament, Bates outperformed teams from Harvard, Stanford, Brandeis, Brown and Princeton in a tournament that’s considered a key prep for the Worlds Universities Debating Championship, this year to be held in Chennai, India, from Dec. 28 to Jan. 3.
Summers will be one of the Bates debaters heading to Worlds, paired with Stephanie Wesson ’14 of Mont Vernon, N.H., along with Blackburn and Stewart.
Summers says that the chance to travel abroad and debate drew him to Bates.
“One reason I ended up at Bates was because I heard there was this wonderful debate team where you could travel the world,” he said. “I’m now living that experience, going to India over winter break and then traveling to China.”
Hovden has announced that Summers will team with Stephanie Wesson ’14 of Mont Vernon, N.H., at Worlds, while Blackburn teams with Stewart.
Follow Bates debate tournaments on BQDC Twitter or Facebook.
Unlike other colleges and universities that perform at this elite level, BQDC, acting in the spirit of Bates as a whole, requires no tryouts and makes no cuts.
The team likes to boast that rookies can come to their very first practice on Monday not even knowing to take notes during rounds (let alone how to debate), and be off to a tournament by Friday, ready to engage in five rounds of persuasion and argumentation on topics for which they often haven’t prepared.
“Bates debate is this wonderful balance between being really open and friendly — a community of friends — while having a competitive edge,” Blackburn says.
For first-years especially, debate provides both a new activity and a community of supportive students interested in unearthing the logic in everyday life and current events.
“The Bates team was incredibly welcoming and were ridiculously supportive,” says Seaman-Grant.
Perhaps more tangibly, debaters say they often see a direct correlation between what they learn in debate and how they succeed in the classroom. Debate hones skills not only in public speaking but also in organization and analysis in papers and research.
On Halloween, BQDC heads into America’s past. Costumed in Colonial-style outfits, they’ll debate the motion, “This house believes that the 13 colonies should declare independence.” The debate takes place in the Edmund S. Muskie Archives at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31.
This weekend, Bates will send teams to tournaments at Northeastern University and University of Vermont tournaments.
For alumni interested in catching up with debaters during Homecoming Weekend, the BQDC will hold a reception from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., Nov. 2, at the Edmund S. Muskie Archives.