Almost 300 competitors from 33 colleges in 13 states
MURFREESBORO — The MTSU Blue Raider Debate team is hosting
the International Public Debate Association’s National Championship Tournament
and Convention for colleges and universities this week.
The tournament, which is open to the public, runs Thursday-Sunday,
April 10-13, with debate rounds starting in the morning and continuing
throughout the day at various buildings on campus. The tournament and
convention concludes with an awards banquet set for noon to 3 p.m. Sunday,
April 13, in the Student Union.
A printable campus map with parking instructions is
available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap13-14.
Organizers expect almost 300 competitors from 33 colleges
and universities in 13 states to visit campus and showcase their debating
skills. Registered schools include Boise State, Southern Illinois and the
United States Military Academy at West Point, with categories including novice,
varsity and professional divisions. In IPDA formats, debaters primarily go
one-on-one with various time limits.
“It’s the largest tournament that IPDA has ever hosted,”
said Dr. Patrick Richey, MTSU debate team coach and a member of the IPDA
governing board.
Richey noted that to his knowledge, this marks the first
time the national tournament is being hosted on the MTSU campus and it comes as
the MTSU debate team completes its third year of returning to competition after
being dormant for a number of years.
“It’s a monumental task to go from a nonexistent team more
or less to hosting a national tournament,” said Richey, director of forensics
at MTSU. “I think it brings huge prestige for the university and the state to
be the school chosen for this event.”
Richey, who said he has coordinated two national debate
tournaments in the past, submitted a bid to host the tournament and attributes
the opportunity to host the tournament to MTSU’s location and the quality of
its debate team.
Richey said MTSU is fielding 13 students in the tournament,
with another 10 debate team members needed to help him with the logistics of
hosting an event that will likely involve 600-plus attendees when visiting
faculty and judges are factored in.
MTSU debaters will be from Richey’s Communications 3210
Argumentation course as part of the Experiential Learning, or EXL, project.
Richey said he’s fielding some of his least experienced debaters because his
veterans are needed to serve as hosts.
“But I think we’re going to do pretty well,” he said.
Top sponsors of the national tournament are the MTSU College
of Graduate Studies and the Belmont School of Law.
Founded with the university in 1911, the MTSU Blue Raider
Debate team was revamped in 2011. In October 2012, the team hosted its first
tournament on campus in nearly a decade and now participates in debates
throughout the region.
For more information about MTSU Blue Raider Debate, contact
Richey at 615-898-2273 or email him at Patrick.Richey@mtsu.edu. You can
also visit www.mtsu.edu/debate/index.php.
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