The Pack contains associated resources for the learning experience, typically in the form of articles and videos. There is a teacher Pack (with only teacher information) and a student Pack (which contains only student information). As a teacher, you can toggle between both to see everything.
Here are the teacher pack items for Let’s Have a Debate:
Overview In this experience, students work in groups on a debate topic. Each group subdivides into teams for and against the topic. Teams research the debate topic in order to plan their initial speech and rebuttal. Teams listen to and address the opposing team’s speech in order to adequately address the arguments made. The students not participating in the debate listen and take notes so they may ask the teams questions as needed. The audience votes on which team presented a more convincing argument. Divide students into groups of 4 or 6 people (if possible), so that both the for and against teams have the same number of participants. If you have an odd number of students, you can have two students split presentation of the initial team position, or you can pair a strong student with an ELL student to work together. The student posts throughout the experience enable you to track student progress and to ensure that the students have divided up the work appropriately. As students work with their teams, monitor their progress and intervene when necessary. Objectives Duration
Giving your opinion is easy. You share your opinions daily. From “I like computer class” to “This is boring,” it is easy for people to state opinions even though others may not agree.
Providing reasons and support for those opinions isn’t as easy. It requires you to think about why you feel the way you do. Even harder is convincing others to agree with you. That requires communicating your opinions and reasons well. In this experience, you will work with a team to debate a topic against another team. You will try to convince the audience to agree with your position. You will collaborate with your team to organize your speeches and plan what the other side might argue and how to prove their side wrong.
Objectives
Explain whether you think Quidditch should become an Olympic sport or not. Be prepared to support your opinion.
Discuss student responses. Have students build off of each other, calling on students in favor of Olympic Quidditch competition followed by a student in opposition to adding a fictional sport to the Olympics. Encourage discussion that builds on what the previous person said.
Divide students into their small groups. Assign each group a different debate topic.
Some possible topics are: