NZ in quarter-finals of World Debating Champs
For immediate release
NZ in quarter-finals of World
Debating Champs
The Russell McVeagh New Zealand
Schools' Debating Team has made the quarter-finals of the
World Schools' Debating Championships being held in Athens,
Greece, after beating Wales last night.
The victory
was unanimous, with all three judges voting for New
Zealand.
New Zealand proposed the motion "That
people should be required to work in return for welfare
payments".
New Zealand now faces Canada in the
quarter-finals, with a possible debate against last year's
champions England awaiting them in the
semi-finals.
New Zealand was narrow runners-up to
England at the 2008 Championships, losing in a 5-4 split
decision in the Grand Final. New Zealand had the 1st, 2nd
and 3rd ranked speakers at the 2008
tournament.
Christopher Bishop of the NZ Schools
Debating Council said that Canada were always tough
opponents but the NZ team would take a lot of confidence
from their perfect record so far at the tournament. New
Zealand beat Canada in the preliminary rounds.
The
five person Russell McVeagh New Zealand Schools' Debating
Team was selected at the national finals of the Russell
McVeagh New Zealand Schools' Debating Championships held in
May 2008. The team comprises Maria English (Captain, Samuel
Marsden Collegiate), Holly Jenkins (Sacred Heart College),
Jennifer Savage (Wanganui Collegiate), Tom Chen (Hillcrest
High School) and Ben Kornfeld (King's College).
The team is being coached by Julia Fetherston (an Australian law student and champion student debater) and Kevin Moar (a policy analyst at the Ministry of Health).
The World Schools' Debating Championships, a global competition for high school debaters, has been held each year since 1988. This year's tournament involves 39 teams, including England, Wales, Scotland, India, Pakistan, the USA, South Africa, South Korea, and Japan. New Zealand has won the tournament three times since 1988 (in 1991, 1992, and 1995), were runners-up in 2008, and hosted the competition in 1994.
Topics debated at this year's Championships include "That public services should be run by private companies", and "That we should encourage the expansion of civilian nuclear energy."
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