Contrary to the claims of a candidate for the presidency: No, debates do not pit people against each other. That’s the job of the election. Instead, debate pits arguments against each other so that we can see which one is more logical, and judge for ourselves which one represents what we need as a nation moving forward. Debating means using credible evidence to back up a claim, to focus on an argument instead of focusing on a speaker, to take nothing personally. No vague assertions. No motherhood statements.
Therefore: No, it is not negative campaigning. A good debate should clarify issues and aid decision-making.
But why debate at all, and why learn it?
When we first studied and practiced debate, we found ourselves forced to think systematically and quickly, and to use the training and lessons we had been given in our first two years of high school. We had to anticipate our opponents’ arguments, which meant that we had to read about all sides of an issue, acknowledge the weaknesses and strengths of different arguments, speak concisely, and, later, attempt to dismantle our opponents’ logic. We could not use isolated sources to back up our claims. Reliance on a single TikTok video without backup books and articles would have kicked a team out of the debate hall.
We learned different debate formats. Sometimes, we knew which side we would be on a week before the debate; at other times, we found out which side we would represent mere minutes before the debate started. In either case, we had to read everything about the issue, not just a summary, quote card, or headline. Reading mattered. Context mattered.
Previous research supports the idea that debate is a strong educational tool. Essays from Stanford, Harvard, and Hong Kong University discuss how teaching students debate also builds confidence, critical thinking, and research skills. Debate teaches empathy: It helps students see and understand the perspectives of different stakeholders, whether these are leaders crafting national policies or laborers working 18 hours a day.
Debate also teaches healthy skepticism. As debaters, our first impulse when confronted with a claim is to check its veracity, rather than accept it outright (or worse, share it).
There are very few condemnations of debate, most of them built on a misunderstanding of the nature of debate rather than empirical data. For example, some writers contend that debate encourages polarization and teaches students to be confrontational. Debate classes, however, trained us to listen to other peoples’ views and acknowledge them, even if we never experienced their struggles, even if we might never be in their position.
A good debate is a conversation, not a confrontation. None of that nonsense of “Filipinos are not a confrontational people.” Debate is critical thinking. Filipinos should be critical thinkers.
One worry I once overheard about debate was how it might foster “disrespect” because children would be encouraged to speak up against their elders.
This begs the question: Would it not be more disrespectful to agree to an elder’s face, and then backbite that elder later? In this age of lies and bigotry, would it not be more disrespectful to be silent in the face of injustice? Would it not be more disrespectful to allow uninformed opinions and dangerous beliefs to spread in one’s family, in one’s community?
Perhaps it’s time we bring back debate to classrooms. Perhaps it’s also time that we cultivate a sense of respect for the common good, instead of fear of private reprisals. We have only ourselves to blame when people do not read beyond one-liners, react violently to headlines, or rely on short but misleading videos alone to guide their understanding of an issue.
We have no one else to blame if we elect a president whose behavior we would not even tolerate in our classrooms.
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iponcedeleon@ateneo.edu