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Round Mechanics

Speaker Points

Speaker points are individual scores judges give to each debater at the end of a round. They evaluate style, content, and strategy, and are used to rank speakers in a tournament.

Speaker points are individual scores that judges assign to each debater at the end of a round. They usually fall on a scale (for example, 70-80 or 20-30 depending on the format) and they measure how well each debater spoke - combining style, content, and strategy into a single number. Speaker points are separate from the win-loss result of the round.

Why Speaker Points Matter

Speaker points determine individual speaker rankings at tournaments, which matter for awards like Top Speaker. They also break ties when multiple teams have the same win-loss record. A debater who wins every round but speaks poorly can finish behind a debater who lost a round but spoke exceptionally well in the others.

What Judges Score

  • Clarity and pacing of delivery
  • Quality of argumentation and reasoning
  • Strength of rebuttal and engagement with the other side
  • Strategic choices - attacking the right arguments, weighing well, prioritizing wisely
  • Handling of Points of Information and cross-examination

Want to actually learn how to use these terms?

DSDC teaches every concept in this glossary in live online classes - from beginner debate to advanced competitive training. Book a free consultation to find the right level for your child.