Skip to main content
Round Mechanics

Ballot

A ballot is the judge's written decision at the end of a debate round, recording who won, individual speaker points, and usually a short explanation of the result.

A ballot in debate is the judge's written decision at the end of a round. It records which team won, individual speaker points for each debater, and usually a short Reason For Decision (RFD) explaining why the judge chose one side over the other. Ballots are one of the most important feedback tools debaters have.

What a Good Ballot Includes

  • Win/loss result for each team
  • Speaker points for each debater
  • Reason For Decision - which arguments were most important and why
  • Specific feedback on strengths and weaknesses
  • Suggestions for improvement

How to Learn From Ballots

Good debaters collect their ballots after every round and review them. Patterns across multiple ballots are especially useful - if three different judges say your rebuttal is weak, that is a clear signal to work on rebuttal. If one judge says your speaking pace is too fast and another says it is fine, you can probably ignore the one-off feedback and focus on the consistent notes.

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.