茄子直播

North American debate champions Kaya Ellis and Louis Tsilivis (photo courtesy Kaya Ellis)

North American champions: 茄子直播 debate team reclaims title from Harvard

Bests McGill University in final round

The University of Toronto has argued its way back into the top spot at the 2014 North American Debating Championships.

Kaya Ellis from 茄子直播 Mississauga and Louis Tsilivis from the Faculty of Law pooled their powers of persuasion to finish in first place ahead of other prominent universities from Canada and the United States.

The 茄子直播 Hart House Debating Club duo faced off against McGill University in the final round of competition last Sunday, with the seven judges awarding Ellis and Tsilivis a convincing 6-1 win.

The first place finish sees 茄子直播 reclaim the title after finishing runner-up to Harvard University in last year鈥檚 final.

茄子直播 now boasts a record six championship victories, ahead of Yale with four and McGill and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with two apiece.

Ellis, who is enrolled in the Master of Management of Innovation Program at 茄子直播 Mississauga, was also awarded third place in the top debater category. She becomes only the seventh female champion in the competition鈥檚 23-year history.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an exhausting but exciting experience to compete at such a high level,鈥 Ellis said.鈥淭he final day of competition consists of four elimination rounds with each debate lasting about 45 minutes.You get topics thrown at you that you know nothing about and you have only 15 minutes to prepare.

鈥淚t鈥檚 challenging but it鈥檚 exciting to engage in a discourse with opposing teams.鈥

The format for the debate was a hybrid of the Canadian and US parliamentary systems.

Teams of two were assigned the role of either government or opposition, with a government speaker opening proceedings, followed by a seven-minute rebuttal from the opposition before returning to the government and then final opposition speaker. The first government speaker was also afforded three minutes of closing remarks.

Topics ranged from the introduction of economic sanctions in the Kyoto Protocol to the internet privacy rights of foreign nationals and the publishing of information from anonymous sources.

Ellis said that despite popular perceptions of debaters being argumentative, debating clubs mainly attracted students who were open to new ideas and the chance to hear the opinions of others.

鈥淭he University of Toronto has been extremely supportive of the debating team,鈥 Ellis said. 鈥淭he university treats debating as seriously as it does varsity sports and helped to finance the team's trip to the championships in Ottawa.

鈥淭he debating club does require a lot of commitment but it鈥檚 also a great outlet from course studies and you become friends with a lot of students from other universities.鈥

Gareth Trickey is a writer with the University of Toronto Mississauga.

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief