- MIDDLE SCHOOL PROGRAMS
- BALTIMORE
- MIAMI
- MILWAUKEE
- NEW YORK
MIDDLE SCHOOL PROGRAMS
Click play on the image below to watch a short video about one of our most exciting Middle School focused programs, The Computer Assisted Debate Program C.A.D.
Middle School Initiative: The Computer Assisted Debate Project
..........The purpose of the Computer Assisted Debate (CAD) Project is to provide a challenging and engaging after-school debate experience for seriously at-risk middle school children that reside in Atlanta Housing Association (AHA) communities. Our community partners in the CAD program include the Atlanta Housing Authority, the Atlanta Public School System, the Boys and Girls Clubs of Metro-Atlanta, Techbridge, and Emory University.
Program Features
Summer Institute: a two-week, 9 am-5 pm, summer institute designed to provide intensive training in debate fundamentals and assess each student for reading level, oral communication skill, and willingness to communicate. The institute is free to all middle school children living in targeted AHA communities and is staffed by a diverse pool of faculty and college students from around the country.
After School Program: a two-day per week after-school program, 4:00 pm-6:00 pm running from August to May where university students and faculty provide in-school training related to persuasive speaking, computer research, argument & evidence evaluation, and cross-examination skills.
Debate Tournaments: run monthly, these competitions allows the CAD students to compete against approximately 200 middle school children from metro-Atlanta. The tournaments are held at various schools, and the CAD students are bused to the various locations for four rounds of competition. Individual and team medals are awarded to novice, junior varsity, and varsity debaters.
Participating Schools:
Benjamin S. Carson Honors Preparatory School
Harper Archer Middle School
Carver Middle School
Awards and Recognition:
*Selected by the White House to be its 2005 signature school program for its Helping America’s Youth Initiative.
*President’s Award from the Atlanta Housing Authority for outstanding service to youth
*Currently being modeled as a start-up program in Baltimore, MD, Miami, FL, and Nashville, TN
*National Award for Higher Education and Community Partnerships Finalist
*Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter Partnership Foundation
Baltimore
Urban Debate League
In
1999, a grant from George Soros’ Open Society Institute funded personnel from
Emory University (founding members of the National Debate Project) to
collaborate with Towson University to create the Baltimore Urban Debate League
(BUDL). The league began with
students from eight schools attending the summer program offered at the Emory
National Debate Institute. Throughout the year, the participating schools held UDL tournaments for
interscholastic competitions.
Almost
a decade later, BUDL is thriving with 35 high schools and 21 middle
schools. In addition to the
ongoing university partnership with Towson, the league now has a non-profit
organizational staff that spearheads programs in Public Debate, College Bridge,
High School Programming, and Middle School Programming. Recently, BUDL received a contract with
the Baltimore School System to implement Debate-Across-the-Curriculum in its
social science classrooms.
The
success of the BUDL program has been featured in a many national media outlets,
including a powerful segment produced for 60
Minutes (see below). Several of
the students in the video are now college students who have chosen to pass on
their knowledge and experience by serving as instructors in a number of UDL
programs around the country. In 2008, two of the alumni of BUDL won the
Cross-Examination Debate Association National Tournament, securing their place
in history as the first UDL team to win a intercollegiate
national debate championship.
(60 Minutes News Program - Segment on debate)
Miami
Urban Debate League
In
2005, the National Debate Project collaborated with the University of Miami to
establish the Miami Urban Debate League for schools throughout Miami Dade
County. Barbara Garrett, the
Director of the league, recently announced that as of 2007, the league is
serving 122 varsity and 104 junior varsity students from area high schools, as
well as 110 middle school children.
A
unique feature of the Miami league is its partnership with the After School
All-Stars Program, a program designed to expand after-school funding for
at-risk youth. Based on the
decision that debate offered a promising after-school experience, the All-Stars
program designated a portion of its funding to students who wished to
participate in the MUDL.
Another
distinguishing aspect of the Miami league is the participation of Bay Point (an
alternative boarding school for boys) and the Incarcerated Girls Program. Funded by the Lennar and Batchelor
Foundations, these schools serving seriously at-risk youth first learn debate
in separate summer institutes and then become mainstreamed into Miami league
tournaments. In 2007, Bay Point
students won three of the five Miami league tournaments, and have, on several
occasions, won the MODEL award (designed to reward good sportsmanship). In the first year of Bay Point’s
participation, more than 150 of the school’s students participated in the Miami
Debate League.
Milwaukee
Debate League
In
1997, a grant from the Einhorn Family Charitable Trust funded personnel from
Georgia State University (founding members of the National Debate Project) to
collaborate with Marquette University to create the Milwaukee Debate
League. In the first year of the
program, 224 students from 12 schools participated. In year two, nine more schools were added, with eight additional
schools participating in 2008-2009.
The
Milwaukee Debate League requires each of its participating schools to offer 4-6
hours of debate instruction each week of the academic school year. Some schools implement that goal
through a dedicated debate class in their curriculum, others rely on
after-school programming, and some combine both in-school and out-of-school
instruction. The results of such a debate program have been rewarding, with
students showing dramatic gains in reading accuracy, fluency, and comprehension
that far exceed national averages for yearly progress. Further, more than half the schools
participating in the league’s first year had to cap their debate enrollments in
because demand was so high.
Given
Milwaukee’s strong commitment to school choice, the MDL provides debate
training to wide range of school types. The participating schools include ones
that are public/private, secular/religious, large/small, and
charter/traditional. Anchored by
Marquette’s commitment to a substantial endowment campaign to sustain the
league, the MDL offers a summer institute, eight interscholastic tournaments
each year, and access to the Marquette Debate Center for teacher training and
student development.
the Milwaukee Debate League)
New York
Urban Debate League
In
1997, a grant from George Soros’ Open Society Institute funded personnel from
Emory University (founding members of the National Debate Project) to
collaborate with New York University to create the New York Urban Debate
League. Having served more than
5000 students and 300 teachers since its inception, the NYUDL remains one of the
largest UDLs in the nation. In 2007-2008,
the league served 780 students from 70 schools in New York.
New
York’s league initially began with schools that served 100% Title I
students. After only one semester
of participation, the NYUDL students demanded to be mainstreamed into New York’s
traditional debate tournament circuit and have competed successfully against
all the NY schools to the present day.
The
NYUDL holds competitions that showcase various forms of youth expression. Recently, some of their students were
featured on MTV demonstrating hip-hop debates. Others have delivered public debates. The NYUDL is now partnered with the
Impact Coalition to ensure its long-term sustainability.








