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Pennsylvania Forensic Association

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General information

This is a College tournament in Pennsylvania.

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Pennsylvania Forensic Association

Championship Tournament

February 17- 18, 2024
WEST CHESTER UNIVERSITY, WEST CHESTER, PA Tournament Host: Nick Prephan (nprephan@wcupa.edu)

On behalf of the Pennsylvania Forensic Association, we invite you to attend the 2024 PFA Championship tournament to be held on Saturday and Sunday, February 17 – 18, 2024. Please plan to join us!

Tournament Features:

  • ●  In-person tournament. Debate on Saturday. Speech on Sunday.

  • ●  Two preliminary rounds of all NFA I.E. events, Declamation, and finals.

  • ●  The tournament will offer four preliminary rounds of IPDA and two-person

    Parliamentary Debate along with appropriate out rounds.

  • ●  Recognized by the Interstate Oratorical Association as the official State Championship.

  • ●  Includes quadrathon and two-tiered sweepstakes awards. Small programs are excellent,

    too; we are committed to recognizing talent across the community.

  • ●  Top six contestants in finals.

  • ●  Group A: Extemporaneous, After Dinner Speaking, Program Oral Interpretation, Duo, Informative,

    Poetry,

  • ●  Group B: Prose, Dramatic Interpretation, Impromptu, Rhetorical Criticism, Persuasion, Declamation.

  • ●  Schools entering speech on Sunday cannot enter competitors in one event of their choice.

    The restriction was decided at last year’s coaches meeting to provide more opportunities

    for school judges to be able to adjudicate rounds.

  • ●  Each school is required to bring at least one judge. If this is a problem, please contact Scott Placke.

  • ●  PFA MEMBERSHIP DUES OF $25.00 AND ENTRY FEES PAYABLE AT REGISTRATION. PARTICIPATION IS DEPENDANT ON PAYMENT

    Covid Information: Covid provisions will be updated as the tournament approaches.

    Forensically Yours,

    Scott Placke, PFA Executive Secretary Nick Prephan, PFA President, Host Lafayette College West Chester University

Saturday

PFA Tournament Schedule

8:00 Registration
8:30 Debate Prep
9:00 Round 1 IPDA and Parli
10:00 Debate Prep
10:30 Round 2 IPDA and Parli
11:30 Debate prep
12:00 Round 3 IPDA and Parli
1:00 Lunch
1:30 Debate Prep
2:00 Round 4 IPDA and Parli
3:30 Quarterfinals Debate Prep
4:00 Quarters IPDA and Parli (as entries permit) 5:00 Debate prep
5:30 Semis IPDA and Parli
6:30 Finals Debate Prep
7:00 Finals IPDA and Parli
8:00 Awards

Sunday

8:00 Registration

8:30 Extemp Prep
9:00
Round 1A: (Extemp/POI/Duo/ADS/Informative/Poe)

10:15 Round 1B: (Impromptu/DI/Per/RC/Pro/Dec)
12:00 Lunch and PFA Business Meeting
12:30 Extemp Prep and PFA Business Meeting Continued
1:00 Round 2A: (Extemp/POI/Duo/ADS/Informative/Poe)
2:15 Round 2B: (Impromptu/DI/Pers/RC/Pro/Dec)
3:45 Extemp Prep Finals
4:00 Finals A Flight: Round 2A: (Ext/POI/Duo/ADS/Informative/Poe) 5:15 Finals B Flight: (Impromptu/DI/Per/RC/Pro/Dec)
6:45 Awards (or ASAP)

The event brackets can be rearranged based on the needs of the tournament.

If you have any questions regarding the tournament please, contact Scott Placke, PFA Executive Secretary, at 610-533-8331(Cell) for emergencies. Having last minute drops before registration, even if it is the hour before, helps make the tournament run more smoothly.

PFA TOURNAMENT RULES AND INFORMATION

  1. Contestants must be undergraduate students at a college or university in Pennsylvania and may not hold a baccalaureate degree.

  2. All materials must not have been used in competition prior to the 2023-2024 academic year.

  3. Each school may enter a maximum of four (4) contestants per event.

  4. Students may enter up to three events in a bracket. Students may not be entered in both

    types of debate.

  5. Manuscripts are to be used for all oral interpretation events.

  6. Visual aids are permitted in all public address events.

  7. While a distinctive competitive advantage is obvious for all memorized presentation of

    public address events, limited notes for these events are permitted. Contestants should be aware (especially in close rounds) that the use of notes will likely be one of the judge’s deciding factors in ranking.

  8. Fees and dates:

a. All fees are to be used to cover tournament expenses. Schools will not be allowed to participate in the tournament unless their entry fees are accounted for by the tournament staff.

  1. Cash is accepted and appreciated.

  2. Additional drop fee invoices, if necessary, will be sent out at registration.

  3. All checks should be made payable to Scott Placke. Checks made payable

to West Chester University or Pennsylvania Forensic Association cannot be cashed.

  1. A membership fee of $25 per school is due at registration.

  2. Tournament entry fees will be $8.00 per entry; each duo counts as one

entry.
g. Quadrathon fees will be $8.00 per contestant. Quadrathon entries will NOT count toward a school’s judging quota.
h. Entry Deadline: All entries are to be submitted on SpeechWire received by
Scott Placke (PFA Executive Secretary) no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 13, 2024.
i.
Drops made after this time will be charged the following fees: Drops in IE.s are $5.00 per slot through Friday at noon; $15 per slot after noon on Friday; and $25 on Saturday and at registration. Drops in debate are $10.00 per debate team through Friday at noon; $30 per debate team after noon on Friday; and $50

on Saturday and at registration. Dropped judges will result in a $50.00 fee plus the cost of covering the slots. Please call in any changes as early as possible using the contact information listed earlier in this invitation.

9. Judging requirements:
a.
Each school is required to bring at least one judge. If this is a problem, please contact Scott Placke.
b. Judging ratios: Each judge covers up to 8 IE slots or up to 2 debate teams and up to 4 IE slots. Each school is obligated to cover their slots or fraction thereof (e.g. 9 IE slots = 2 judges, 17 IE slots = 3 judges).
A very limited number of judges may be hired at $10.00 per uncovered IE slot or $40.00 per uncovered debate team.
c. Judges ideally should have a minimum of an undergraduate degree in communication studies or a related field.
d. Judges will be expected to cover any event, IE or Debate unless limitations are indicated. No school bringing debate teams may opt out of judging debate rounds.
e. Two rounds of preliminary competition will be held in each IE event. Final rounds will be held in all events having more than one section of competition. There will be four preliminary rounds of Debate and appropriate elimination rounds.
f.
Schools entering speech on Sunday cannot enter competitors in one event of their choice. The restriction was decided at last year’s coaches meeting to provide more opportunities for school judges to be able to adjudicate rounds.

10. Awards:
a. Awards will be given to the top six students in each event based on the results of the final round. Each member of a duo will receive an award. All debaters advancing to elimination rounds will receive awards.
b. Quadrathon: Students entered in four or more events qualify for quadrathon. If a student has more than four events, points will be counted from only the top four. A genre requirement of at least 2 genres is also required. If a competitor has more than four events only the four best within genres would be used to calculate points. Parli and IPDA count as a limited prep event.
c. Sweepstakes awards will be given to the top six schools in Open Division and the top three schools in President’s Division comprised of the 50% of schools with the smallest entries at the close of entries at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 14. No entry additions will be accepted after that time.

1.) Only a school’s top two speakers in any event will count toward the school’s sweepstakes total from preliminary rounds.
2.) All students in final rounds contribute to sweepstakes.
3.) Preliminary round counts for individual events:

1st place = 3 points
2
nd place = 2 points
3
rd place = 1 points
4.) Preliminary round counts for Debate Win = 2 points

Loss = 0 points
5.) Final Round counts for individual events: 1
st place = 12 points
2
nd place = 10 points
3
rd place = 8 points
4
th place = 7 points
5
th place = 5 points
6
th place = 3 points
6.) Elimination round counts for Debate:
1
st place = 10 points
2
nd place = 8 points
Semifinalist = 6 points
Quarterfinalist = 4 points

d.
or American Forensic Association Championships based on each organization’s rules. Go to
http://www.mnsu.edu/cmst/niet/eventdescriptions-new09-10.htm for AFA event descriptions or http:// http://www.nationalforensics.org/ for NFA event rules.
e. The top two contestants in persuasive speaking will represent the State of Pennsylvania at the Interstate Oratorical Contest, usually the weekend after the NFA Championships. In the event that one or both of these students cannot attend, the remaining finalists will serve as alternates in descending order of tournament rank. The PFA will pay all entry/registration fees for the students. The PFA will also contribute $200.00 to help cover costs for each contestant
if tournament revenues are sufficient.

  1. Impromptu Prompts: Round 1 - Quotations; Round 2 - Proverbs; Finals - Single words

  2. Declamation - This event involves the oral interpretation of a public address. The chosen

    speech may be contemporary or historical, but, either way, the selection should be in some manner significant—politically so, historically so, socially so, or an excellent example of a genre. As with other interpretive events, the competitor may choose to deliver the speech as it might originally have been or to offer a fresh interpretation of it. A brief, original introduction should precede the speech. It is included in the competitor’s time. The use of manuscript is required. Ten minutes maximum.

    Parliamentary Debate: Rules & Procedures

The speakers in each event qualify for the National Forensic Association

  1. Each debate team shall consist of two people prepared to debate as either the Government or Opposition. Tournament postings will identify which side of the debate each team will be on or it is a round in which teams flip for sides.

  2. There will be four preliminary rounds at the tournament and the appropriate number of elimination rounds based upon entry. With respect to the types of resolutions that will be used, there will be specific rounds for policy, fact, value, and metaphor resolutions.

  3. For topic selection the teams will have one list with the three topic choices. The Opposition team will have one minute to strike one of the three choices. Immediately following the Opposition strike the Government team will then have one minute to read and strike one of the two remaining topics. The remaining topic after the Government strike will be the official resolution for the round.

  4. Teams shall be given thirty minutes preparation time for the debate after the resolution has been read into the round. The Government team reserves the right to prepare in the competition room if they like. If the Government team uses the debating room for preparation, both the judge and the opposition must vacate the room until the time for the debate to begin.

  5. No coaching is allowed in Parliamentary Debate during preparation time. Judges will patrol prep time in order to ensure compliance with these rules.

  6. Internet research is allowed during parliamentary preparation time. Use of almanacs is also strongly encouraged.

  7. For rules other than those listed above (i.e. Points of Information procedure), the NPDA constitution, by-laws and guidelines (most recently updated) shall be followed for the tournament.

  8. Format of the debate (there is not prep time between speeches) - First Government Constructive Speech: 7 minutes
    - First Opposition Constructive Speech: 8 minutes
    - Second Government Constructive Speech: 8 minutes

    - Second Opposition Constructive Speech: 8 minutes
    - Opposition Rebuttal by First Opposition Speaker: 4 minutes
    - Government Rebuttal by First Government Speaker: 5 minutes

    IPDA Debate: Rules & Procedures

A. Debaters will be presented with three resolutions. Both debaters will alternatively strike one resolution each, starting with the negative. The 30-minute preparation period begins at the first negative strike. We will follow the time constraints set forth by the IPDA: 5-2-6-2-3-5-3.
B. During prep time, students are allowed to access any prepared material and/or electronic materials. This includes access to the Internet. In addition, students are allowed to prep with other students, but NOT COACHES.

C. All preliminary rounds will be randomly preset. Brackets will NOT be broken in elimination rounds.
D. There will be a designated room for topic draw. Students MUST report there ON TIME for draw! IPDA will most likely be flighted so students should note which flight they are. Further info can be found at
www.ipdadebate.info

 

 

Manager contact information

Scott Placke
Email address: plackeh@lafayette.edu
Phone number: 6105338331

Mailing address

None provided

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