Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Monday, July 10, 2006
Bring on the Debates!
The Communitarianism lab began today's meeting with a demonstration round between Rodrigo Hernandez and Megan Foreman. Megan choose the affirmative side of the resolution and Rodrigo the negative. Megan began by reading a fairly traditional case, arguing that health care should be provided in order to protect the right to life. Rodrigo, never one to follow the crowd, countered with a negative case that claimed that since every country contained so many diverse groups with different conceptions of justice it is impossible to determine what a
just government is, in an absolute sense. This round catapulted the lab into a heated discussion over whether Rodrigo's position was fair and debateable. Hopefully, this meeting prepared the debaters for the practice rounds set to start on Monday.
Sunday, July 09, 2006
The first week of workshop comes to a close
Saturday, July 08, 2006
A Day in the Lab
Friday began with a lecture on vocal theory and presentation followed by lab drills that focused on techniques effective in improving delivery. We then had a brief lab that covered schedule updates and an evaluation by the students detailing what they like about lab so far and what they would like to focus more on in the future. Following lunch the students endured a large block of intense case writing, trying to edit and finish their cases for the practice rounds to come the next day. At 5 everything started to wind down with some optional activities. Students choose to either watch a demonstration debate, play basketball, or do more work on cases.
Thursday, July 06, 2006
Cases are in but the pressure never ceases
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Day 3 Comes to a Close
It is 10:30 on the eve of day 3 and students are still hard at work. This was the most intense day yet for students with C-X drills, three lectures over subjects ranging from effective cross-examination strategies to moral relativism, and research time devoted to making their first case writing deadline. In the BA lab we began by discussing the finer points of communitarianism. Patrick and Mr. Alston discussed the difference between individualism and communitarianism. Jessica and Daniel helped break down a particularly difficult passage from the assigned reading. To round off the discussion, Courtney questioned the potential link between communitarianism and the social contract leading us to the conclusion that a good social contract would be largely based in a communitarian framework. The rest of lab time was devoted to topic analysis and preliminary case writing. Hopefully, everyone will have at least one case done by 6:30 tomorrow evening.
Day 2 lab comes to an end
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
First Day of Lab
The communitarianism lab began the day with an introduction reflective of the distinction UNT makes between being a workshop versus a camp. After giving the standard information (name, grade, school) each student was asked to list the ten most important rights, according to them, and give justifications for those rights. In keeping with the stereotypes for their age group, the most popular rights where the right to unrestricted access to media and to change any rules they did not agree with. After everyone was sufficiently acquainted the lab got straight to work. They engaged the camp topic by analyzing the most important part, how to define Justice. The lengthy first meeting concluded with a brief introduction to other key words in the resolution such as "citizens", "provide", and "government." After lectures, reading groups, a demonstration debate by the staff, and of course meals the lab met a again to close out the day with a discussion of the strengths and weaknesses exhibited by the debaters in demonstration debate and further topic analysis. Of course it was not a day of all work and no play for the BA(Bexley, Alston) lab. The seriousness of the issues discussed in topic analysis was always lightened by the antics of Mr. Alston who employed cultural references as a technique for remembering student's names. Many were surprised to learn that they could be linked to such characters as Jordan Baker of The Great Gatsby, female members of the Catholic Clergy, and the timeless western "Shane."