TOURNAMENT R(1):Speedrace vs Crocodile
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 1 vote and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...

- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 30,000
- Voting period
- One week
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Judges
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bhNN3TEx1wJmf_Tq2yevvEvAhyIFOmKJYkBN_DLumOA/edit?usp=sharing
Definition(s) and Scope:
The topic specifies "on balance," meaning considering both the positives and negatives. Therefore, if I manage to prove that charter schools are beneficial to the quality of education in the United States, and that the positives associated with charter schools outweigh the negatives, then I have won the debate.
The scope of this debate is to look at the present in the United States.
BoP:
The burden of proof is shared between pro and con (or at least, that is how I am defining it to be. My opponent should counter in his first round argument if he disagrees, otherwise it will be assumed that he agrees with this BoP.). This means that I must prove that charter schools are beneficial to the quality of education in the United States, and that the positives associated with charter schools outweigh the negatives. My opponent must prove that charter schools are not beneficial to the quality of education in the United States and/or that the and that the negatives associated with charter schools outweigh the positives. It is not enough to only respond to the other's arguments; both sides are responsible for providing evidence for their position.
Also, it is not my job to outline the negatives of charter schools, and likewise, it is not my opponent's job to outline the positives of charter schools. We only need to respond to the negatives/positives outlined by each other. If my opponent does not outline any negatives and I outline positives, I de facto win. If I provide no positives and he provides negatives, he de facto wins.
My opponent should make sure to accept/contend the definitions, scope, and BoP in his opening round.
Preamble:
To prove my case, I must do two things:
1. Prove that charter schools do increase the quality of education in the United States.
2. Highlight positives associated with charter schools.
Firstly, what is a charter school? From a paper published by the Center of Reinventing Public Education [2], “charter schools aim to use their autonomy to design unique strategies to teach students who may not have been well served in traditional district-run schools.”
The following are reasons why charter schools do increase the quality of education in the United States:
- High-achieving charter school policies
A study performed in 2018 [1] by Sarah Cohodes, an assistant professor at Columbia University, looked at the differences between charter and public schools in the United States. According to the study, while charter schools and traditional public schools have the same average performance, “most broad studies of charter schools also suggest that charters serving urban and low-income student populations can boost test scores…the most effective charter schools appear to hold promise as a way to reduce achievement gaps.”
It continues to say that “adopting the practices of successful charter schools in traditional public schools, or turning around struggling traditional public schools with charter organizations” is likely the good way to improve student achievement “and narrow the achievement gap.”
Because the presence of charter schools in the United States produces productive policies that, when adopted, could narrow the achievement gap, this shows that charter schools increase the quality of education in the United States. - Large degree of variation
In a report [2] written in 2014 by Patrick Denice, a postdoctoral research associate at Washington University in St. Louis, Denice outlines that charter schools are very experimental, and as such, vary widely in terms of success. He goes on to say that “outperforming schools can be expanded and replicated; under performing schools can be improved, closed, or replaced.”
While it may seem like a negative that charter schools do create some under performing schools, this is simply an inevitable part of the process, and those schools can always reform according the the principles of schools that have done well. Overall, the large degree of variation is not only self-correcting, but shines a lot of light onto what educational practices work, and which ones do not, allowing for improvement in the general education sector. - Evidence in Florida
According to an article [3] written in 2019 by Dr. Judith Stein, former Executive Director of the Division of Magnet/Innovative Programs for Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Florida saw “some of the biggest gains in America over the past two decades” following their rapid charter school expansion. Their graduation rates went up by “more than 30 points from 20 years ago,” reading and math scores are up for “every subgroup and every grade compared with 20 years ago.” This is concrete proof that charter schools increase the quality of education in the United States. - Surrounding
Influence
In a dissertation [4] written in 2018 by Jarod Taylor Apperson at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University, he finds that “for every 10 percent increase in charter market share, neighborhood student achievement (i.e. students at both charter and traditional schools) increases 0.01 standard deviations in ELA and 0.04 standard deviations in Math.” This proves that not only do charter schools themselves tend to perform well, but that they positively influence the public schools around them.
- https://futureofchildren.princeton.edu/sites/futureofchildren/files/resource-links/charter_schools_compiled.pdf
- https://www.crpe.org/sites/default/files/CRPE_Are-charter-schools-working_brief.pdf
- https://www.sun-sentinel.com/opinion/commentary/fl-op-com-stein-fla-students-achievement-charter-schools-20190611-6oqan74lenhwffx27c4yemuih4-story.html
- https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1152&context=econ_diss
The latest national research found that charter students in Pennsylvania cover 29 fewer days of reading material on average, and 50 fewer days of math than traditional public schools.
And now I ask Con – if Rep. Roebuck believes that charter schools decrease (or just do not increase) the quality of education in the United States, as your argument seems to imply, why then does he push to reform the governmental oversight surrounding them, rather than simply getting rid of charter schools themselves.
2. https://onlinedegrees.sandiego.edu/are-charter-schools-better-in-creating-education-equity/
3. https://www.comparably.com/salaries/salaries-for-charter-schools-teacher
4. https://www.comparably.com/salaries/salaries-for-public-school-teacher
Ultimately a concession...
Pro did a fine job showing variety of education is double good plus (pardon the Newspeak pun). I think had the debate proceeded this ultimately would have been the deciding factor, that a variety of education improves the population via making them as a whole more complete.
Con did a good job countering given the poor performance of some, and the inability to actually prune the bad ones. I will say that I was unmoved by the appeal to pity that not everyone wins the lottery for them (sorry I've seen this type of thing too much, just because something does not lift up everyone, does not mean it should not be allowed to lift up anyone).
Pennsylvania is a fine point. It runs the risk of cherry picking, but even as a numbers guy, I do relate well to individual cases even while I know it's not everywhere (toss in one or two more bad states, and it would feel like it's not a mere outlier).
The ability to reform was a good defense, even if it was open to being exploited by con via expectations vs. reality (kinda like a proposal to raise taxes to put money into x, sure you can raise taxes, but that does not guarantee the earmarked money will actually go into x).
The wages one was a nice example of a defense which harms the credibility of an opponent. While it leaves an unexplained wage gap (around 3.6%), it isn't a significant one when it was promised to be a huge one.
Sources:
Flipping Rep. Roebuck's appeal from con was well played, when pro already had a significant lead from well utilizing the numerical data points.
"Pro did a fine job showing variety of education is double good plus (pardon the Newspeak pun)."
I'm glad I read 1984 this summer so I could understand this lol
I sometimes write half of it in there, then paste it into DART. But for some reason my mind decided to do the whole thing in DART
Sorry to hear about your posting difficulties. In future I strongly advise writing your arguments in an outside text editor which saves them as you work (such as Google docs), then copy/paste them in when you're ready.
Well this sucks :(
Good luck in future rounds to you Speedrace, perhaps you could even clutch the win
Vote
Sorry that happened to you :(
Sick!!
https://www.debateart.com/forum/topics/4660-alpha-beta-pruning?page=1
i got into coding because of this post.
i didn't even know what it meant
ay i started to learn python too.
just doing it in my spare time, im currently working on minimax algorithms for a tic tac toe game
Im gonna post it at the 10 second mark :)
thats good
purely Javascript rather*
Python to start as well, I took a class over the summer that used a lot of it, but I've been coding a Discord bot recently and that uses purely Java.
python to start and I got a java programming book I have been reading for 2 months, you?
Programs I mean not arguments lol
And what language do you use
What arguments have you been working on
hell yeah
Awesome!! It's pretty great
into **it**
because I got into over quarantine and i love it!
Yessssirrrr why
you code?
I've been busy coding all weekend, I'm doing it today though
Don't forget
bump
Will be watching this one closely. Good luck to both contenders!
Good Luck!