World Schools (WSDC) is the international high school format. Three speakers per side, eight-minute substantives, four-minute reply speeches given by the first or second speaker. Motions are released as a mix — half are prepared months in advance, half are impromptu released about an hour before the round.
WSDC rounds break into three layers — principle, practical, and weighing. The first speaker on each side establishes the framework (definitional clarity + principles), the second develops practical analysis (mechanism, stakeholders, comparative outcomes), and the third does refutation, weighing, and impact comparison. The reply speech is a "biased adjudication" — your team's case for why you won.
World Schools is a three-on-three high-school debate format used at the World Schools Debating Championships (WSDC) and most national school circuits. It mixes prepared motions (released a few days to a few weeks before the round) with impromptu motions (released about an hour before). Eight-minute substantives and a four-minute reply.
Same team structure (three speakers plus a reply) but longer speeches (eight minutes instead of seven), and motions are partly prepared. WSDC also enforces a more formal register: fewer squirrels, fewer aggressive definitions, more emphasis on policy comparison and clean weighing. Asians is almost entirely impromptu; WSDC is half-and-half.
Substantives are eight minutes; the reply is four minutes. Points of information are allowed between the first and seventh minute. The third speaker (whip) brings no new matter.
Three substantive speakers per side plus a reply. The reply is given by the first or second speaker (not the third whip). Eight substantive speeches per round, plus the two replies.
No. WSDC is a competitive debate format with fixed sides (proposition and opposition) and a single motion. MUN is a parliamentary simulation where delegates represent countries and negotiate resolutions across committees. Different judging, different skills.
Sixty-plus national teams. Major debating countries include South Africa, Singapore, India, Australia, Canada, the US, Pakistan, Hong Kong, Greece, and the Philippines. National team selection is competitive at every level: most countries run their own trial system.
Yes. That's the whole point of prepared rounds. Coaches and teams build case files for the released motion list, refining them across weeks of practice rounds. At WSDC, half the motions are prepared (you know them in advance) and half are impromptu (one hour of prep).
POIs are allowed from the first-minute mark to the seventh-minute mark of each substantive speech. The speaker can accept or decline. Most strong WSDC speakers take two POIs per speech, used both to look engaged and to plant pre-emptive blocks for upcoming opposition speeches.
Short guides on the moves that win specific WSDC speeches.
The AI takes any seat (1st/2nd/3rd Prop, 1st/2nd/3rd Opp). Run impromptu prep and the round.
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