A Point of Information, usually called a POI, is a short interjection from the opposing team during a debater's speech. The opposing debater stands, offers a POI, and the speaker chooses to either accept (and let the opposing debater speak for up to 15 seconds) or decline. POIs are used in British Parliamentary, World Schools, CNDF, and Junior WSDC, among other formats.
When POIs Can Be Offered
POIs can only be offered during the middle of a speech - usually not in the first minute or the last minute. This protected time at the start gives the speaker time to set up their argument, and the protected time at the end lets them close without interruption. The exact timing rules vary slightly by format.
How to Take a POI Well
Accepting POIs well is a sign of confidence and debate maturity. Judges reward speakers who take one or two POIs per speech, respond calmly, and return to their own argument without losing momentum. Declining every POI or looking rattled during one are both red flags that lower speaker points.
How to Offer a POI
A good POI is short, specific, and damaging. The best POIs ask a question that the speaker cannot answer without conceding something important. A weak POI is a long-winded speech disguised as a question, which judges see through immediately.