The NSDA Public Forum resolution rotates monthly. Each topic runs about four weeks of competition, then refreshes. This page covers the current resolution, strategic framing, and the last six months of topics — with a practice button that loads each one into an AI debate trainer.
Public Forum is a two-on-two debate format aimed at lay judges. Speeches are short — 4 minutes constructive, 3 minutes rebuttal, 3 minutes summary, 2 minutes final focus — and the language stays accessible. No K's, no theory, no spreading. Evidence carries weight, but only if you can explain why it matters in plain English.
The Pro/Con coin flip happens at the start of every round, so you prep both sides. Strong PF debaters build a single core contention per side and link every piece of evidence back to one weighing mechanism: probability times magnitude, scope, reversibility, or moral framing.
The Pro burden is to show that AI regulation produces net positive outcomes. The strongest contentions tend to be:
The classic Pro weighing is probability × scope: lots of small harms across millions of users, multiplied by likelihood of regulatory effectiveness.
Con's job is to show the harms of expanded regulation outweigh. Common chains:
Con tends to weigh on magnitude and irreversibility — once you lose a generation of researchers or open-source ecosystems, you don't get them back.
Public Forum (PF) is the NSDA's flagship two-on-two high-school debate format aimed at lay judges. The resolution rotates monthly, so teams debate the same topic for about four weeks before it changes. Constructive speeches are four minutes, rebuttals three, summaries three, and final focus two. Crossfire periods between speeches are conversational and timed.
Four minutes constructive, four minutes rebuttal, three minutes summary, two minutes final focus. Three crossfire periods of three minutes each (speaker-1 crossfire, speaker-2 crossfire, grand crossfire). A full PF round runs about 35 minutes including prep.
All quoted or paraphrased evidence must be retrievable with a full citation (author, publication, date, title) per NSDA rules. Preferred sources are news outlets (NYT, WSJ, Reuters, BBC), think tanks (Brookings, CSIS, RAND, CFR, Pew), peer-reviewed journals, and government data (CBO, BLS, IMF, OECD). Drop a name every 30 to 45 seconds of speech time.
Crossfire is a three-minute back-and-forth question period between two debaters from opposing teams (speaker-1 crossfire after the first two constructives, speaker-2 crossfire after the rebuttals). It's conversational, not a one-sided cross-examination. Aggressive crossfire (yelling, talking over) gets penalized. Goal is to pin opponents to concessions.
The final focus is the last two-minute speech for each side. No new arguments allowed. Purely weighing: which impact outweighs on magnitude, probability, timeframe, or scope, and why the judge should write the ballot for your side. The cleanest final focuses give the judge a one-sentence ballot story plus one comparative weighing argument.
Monthly during the competitive season (September through April). Some months use the same topic for two consecutive months for major-tournament continuity. The Tournament of Champions (TOC) and NSDA Nationals each have their own topic announcements. Resolutions are released about three weeks before the start of the relevant month.
PF is two-on-two evidence-based and lay-accessible; LD is one-on-one philosophical with a value-criterion framework. PF resolutions are policy-flavored ("Resolved: The US should..."); LD resolutions are normative ("a just society ought..."). PF avoids jargon for lay judges; circuit LD embraces kritiks, theory, and faster delivery.
Substantive claims that drive a contention need evidence. Definitional or framework claims usually don't. The strongest PF teams cut two or three high-quality cards per side, explain each one thoroughly, and use the rest of the time for analysis and weighing. Card spam without explanation gets discounted by most judges.
Short guides on the moves that win specific PF speeches.
Pick a side. The AI takes the other and runs a full PF round — constructive, rebuttal, summary, final focus — then writes you an RFD.
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