Time to debate!
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Host a friendly classroom debate: choose a simple topic, research facts, prepare short arguments, practice speaking clearly, and listen respectfully.

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Step-by-step guide to host a friendly classroom debate

What you need
Index cards, paper, pencil, timer or stopwatch

Step 1

Choose a simple fun topic for your debate like "Cats vs Dogs" or "Should school start later?"

Step 2

Invite classmates or family to join and assign who will be the speakers the host and the timekeeper

Step 3

Tell everyone the time limits for each part for example 1 minute for opening 30 seconds for rebuttal and 30 seconds for closing

Step 4

Ask each speaker to write three quick facts that support their side on separate index cards

Step 5

Ask each speaker to write a one-sentence opening argument on a piece of paper

Step 6

Have each speaker practice saying their opening sentence out loud once while you use the timer

Step 7

Tell everyone the ground rules: speak kindly wait your turn and listen quietly

Step 8

Ask listeners to write one respectful question while the other team speaks

Step 9

Start the debate by having the first speaker give their timed opening statement then continue through rebuttals and closings

Step 10

Share your finished creation on DIY.org

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

Complete & Share
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Help!?

What can we use instead of index cards or a timer if we don't have them?

If you don’t have index cards or a separate timer, use torn pieces of paper or sticky notes for the three facts and use a smartphone or kitchen timer for the timed opening and rebuttal steps.

What if speakers keep going over the time limits or get too nervous during their opening?

If speakers consistently go over the stated time limits, have the timekeeper use the timer visibly and give a 10‑second hand signal during the practice step so speakers learn pacing before the live opening.

How can we adapt the debate for younger children or make it more challenging for older kids?

For younger kids shorten the time limits to 20–30 seconds, let them draw one picture instead of writing three index‑card facts, and for older kids extend openings and require a written rebuttal on paper.

How can we extend or personalize the activity and share the result?

To extend the activity, add a simple scoring sheet for the host to rate arguments, let teams design matching props or slides, and record the debate to edit and share your finished creation on DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to host a friendly classroom debate

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Debating skills - Introduction

4 Videos

Facts about debate and public speaking for kids

⏱️ Many school debates use short timed speeches (often 1–3 minutes) to keep arguments clear and fair.

🎤 About 75% of people say public speaking makes them nervous — so butterflies are totally normal!

📜 Aristotle's Rhetoric named three persuasive tools: ethos (trust), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic).

🏛️ Formal debating goes back to Ancient Greece, where citizens used public argument to shape democracy.

🧠 Research shows students who take part in debates often boost critical thinking, reasoning, and reading skills.

How do I host a friendly classroom debate for kids?

Start by choosing a simple, age-appropriate topic (e.g., "Should school days be shorter?"). Explain ground rules: speak one at a time, be respectful, and use facts. Assign teams or pairs, give time to research and write two or three short points, set a timer for turns, and have a moderator to keep order. End with a calm closing where each side summarizes briefly and everyone reflects on what they learned about listening and arguing respectfully.

What materials do I need for a kid-friendly debate activity?

You’ll need topic cards, index cards or paper for notes, pens or pencils, a simple rules sheet, and a timer or stopwatch. Optional: a whiteboard or poster for key facts, a few kid-safe reference books or bookmarked websites, name tags, and a small bell or signal to show turn changes. Keep materials simple so kids focus on ideas and speaking, not on fancy props.

What ages is a classroom debate suitable for?

Debates can be adapted for many ages. Young children (5–7) can do short, guided mini-debates with yes/no positions and teacher prompts. Elementary kids (8–11) manage short team debates with simple research. Middle and high schoolers (12+) can handle more structured formats and evidence-based arguments. Adjust topic complexity, speaking time, and adult support to match attention spans and verbal abilities.

What are the benefits of doing debates with children?

Debates build critical thinking, research skills, clear speaking, and respectful listening. Kids learn to organize ideas, support claims with facts, and tolerate opposing views. The activity also boosts confidence, teamwork, and classroom participation. For safety, choose non-inflammatory topics, set strict respect rules, and remind children that disagreeing with ideas is fine while personal attacks are not.
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Time to debate. Activities for Kids.