As in, how do you get better outside of just doing debate, since coordinating practice takes time with the group and you can’t do it a lot due to time restraints. That and I don’t think I can do it in a manner frequent enough, and focused enough. I assume you just do drills with your role? If so, what would be best?

For context, I got accepted as a 1st speaker for a college debate event in Asian parlament format. Experience wise, I am a beginner. Though I have done adjudications and had some practice with a newly formed club in the last year of high school, it was only isolated to that. No competitions with other schools or anything. Which is why I’m definitely not confident I can match a teammate of mine which has been doing debate for years and got to international level (to my knowledge). I’m not so much worried about my opponents per se, more so just that I don’t want to hold my teammate back since as the 1st speaker, you have to set them up. I at least wanna do a somewhat decent job so that they can - to be blunt - “carry” us without worry.

Right now, I’ve just been dabbling with using ChatGPT as a sort of coach/adjudicator and I think it’s pretty effective? If there are other methods I can do alone/in downtime/outside group practice, I would like to try them at least given the short time left until the event.

Sorry if this ended up a bit ramble-y, this was done on a whim and close to midnight, but yeah.

  • DontTakeMySky@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    21 days ago

    Don’t rely too much on ChatGPT here. It’s not a human and isn’t going to respond the same way a human would.

    If you over practice with that tool you might become great at debating ChatGPT but that may entrench bad habits that hurt you when debating a human.