Building Competency with Controversy

Retired ethicist and friend John Hardwig recently forwarded the above talk hosted by Aidan Kestigan of ThinkerAnalytix.org with Dona Warren & Dave Dettman of the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Reviewing the PowerPoint and watching the recording, it became apparent that what Warren and Dettman were talking about was very much aligned with and complementary to Ethics Bowl.

In a nutshell, here’s a process to try as a coach, or simply as an educator interested in elevating students’ civic IQ, or what Warren calls their “competence with controversy.” They didn’t explain this in terms of an Ethics Bowl case analysis, but I think it fits perfectly.

Pick a case. Read it aloud. Divide the team in half. Ask one half to research, be able to support and present on one perspective, and ask the other half to do the same for some opposing perspective.

I know this sounds an awful lot like debate. But hang with me! Warren and Dettman share Ethics Bowl’s preference for rational deliberation over mindless attack.

Bring the groups back together and have one present the position they’ve developed. Invite the other group to ask clarifying questions and challenge the first group’s logic. Now have the other team present their position, the first team now in challenger mode. Have the teams swap perspectives (adopting the argument the other initially pitched), do additional research, and prepare to present again, only this time in light of lessons learned during the first round.  

Bring the groups back together and have them share/critique again – everyone should be becoming mini experts. And finally (and this is the Ethics Bowl overlap), have them discuss collaboratively which view seems to genuinely make the most sense. It won’t necessarily be either of the first two views, and very well could be some third alternative or hybrid. Either way, tada! More informed and humble students, plus the beginnings of a position the Ethics Bowl team can feel good about defending.

I suspect many coaches do something like this already. But maybe not. Back in my coaching days, anytime we’d broach a new case, students would naturally defend opposing views. But it was organic, not especially organized, and discussion was often defensive. The reason: students worried they might be personally connected to whatever view they were expressing. Even if the topic was safe, nobody likes to be wrong. And so fear over being an outcast or simply bested got in the way of reason.

Warren and Dettman actually talk about this and call the anxiety we all feel part of the “cognitive load” burdening our minds when discussing difficult issues. But one way to decrease that load and free up more mental bandwidth is to follow a standardized process like the above.

The last part is to “map” the arguments, which takes time, but can be quite powerful. As Waren puts it, “At first, it makes things harder.” However, “what you have eliminated is the unnecessarily complex presentation of material.” And what you gain is a whole lot of clarity about what you believe and why.

Regular EthicsBowl.org contributor Coach Michael Andersen also recommends argument mapping, and you can find some suggestions and resources from him by searching the blog. But one tip from Dr. Warren: use different colors to represent competing perspectives. That is, when you’re mapping objections and rebuttals, give the objections a different color than the primary argument, but give rejoinders the primary perspective’s color. “Just keep track of which team the color is playing for, and then give it that color on the map.”

Three bonus insights:

  1. Something Warren had to wait until grad school to hear from a professor: “A problem with implementing policy, of course, is that there are limited resources,” meaning we can’t explore Mars, maintain the naval fleet, cure cancer, cancel student loan debt AND rebuild the nation’s bridges simultaneously – the federal budget is not infinite, though Congress does behave that way at times.
  2. Try interpreting arguments “charitably” or “with empathy,” meaning in their best possible light. Why? While arrogance can be superficially fun, very few positions are completely baseless. By trying to understanding perceived competitors’ views while assuming they actually could be reasonable, we’re more likely to appreciate the kernel of wisdom behind them, or at least their proponents’ understandable motives. This is actually something I had to be reminded of in grad school…
  3. Dr. Dettman recommends a “dignity index” to encourage mutually respectful treatment among students. From DignityIndex.us, it’s “an eight-point scale that scores speech along a continuum from contempt to dignity in as unbiased a manner as possible. By focusing on the sound bites, not the people behind them, the Index attempts to stay true to its own animating spirit: that everyone deserves dignity.”

Thanks to Aidan Kestigan at ThinkerAnalytix for hosting, to Dr. Warren and Dr. Dettman for your talk and superb work, to the guests for their excellent questions and engagement, and to John for sharing. Ethics Bowl has many friends in the critical thinking community. And it’s always cool to stumble upon new allies.

New Case Analysis Guide and Presentation Planner

Our friend Michael Andersen in Washington is at it again, meticulously crafting and gifting invaluable resources to the global Ethics Bowl community. I’ve never thought of you as an elf before, Michael. But your care and generosity, and your location several degrees north of Tennessee, are bringing that comparison to mind!

Andersen’s Step-by-Step Guide, adapted from Dustin Webster’s Coaching Manual, leads ethletes from first impressions and relevant facts, into key stakeholders’ perspectives, the values and interests they’re likely to emphasize. While the guide asks teams to name the central moral tension, it’s careful to marinate in analysis mode. Visualizing parties adjacent on the page, it invites teams to adopt a character and talk things through.

It’s the perfect lead-in to Andersen’s Presentation Planner – a strategic blueprint of exactly what a team intends to argue and who’s responsible for what. Settling who’s answering the moderator’s question, who’s justifying the team’s position and who’s handling the recap on paper is sure to reduce confusion, promote quality prep and make a team both feel and perform better come Bowl day.

We’ll soon post some of Michael’s regional NHSEB case study guides, and may have an analysis of case 14, “A Phenotypic Prometheus?” Michael may or may not be co-authoring with Portland State Philosophy grad student, assistant coach and rising rock star educator Hassan Eltelbany… But first, we’re proud to share this thorough, concise and clear analysis how-to, as well as two examples of the humbly titled “Minimum Presentation Plan.” Thank you from all of us, Michael! Please say hello to Santa!

Kicking Off the Season with New Cases, New Studio Times & New AAPAE Champions

Happy fall! With the 2023-2024 season fully underway, here are three important updates.

  1. The NHSEB case pool is live here. Favorites include #1 on generative AI (my second favorite issue), #4 on Canada’s recent move to freeze the finances of certain protestors (PM Trudeau sparking considerable debate), and #5 on the morality of cruelty in video games (which is very likely to lead to callousness in the real world).
  2. Per a recent email from our friends at UNC’s Parr Center and the National High School Ethics Bowl, “NHSEBAcademy’s popular Studio Hours program has been revamped and now offers on-demand appointments every day of the week and across multiple time zones.” Session foci range from case brainstorming to presentation consultation to commentary workshops to judge Q&A practice. Live, on-demand, free coaching on the core components of Ethics Bowling? That’s hard to beat. If you’re coaching a team or on a team, book some free studio time here. A big thank you to our friends at Parr for offering such a helpful and generous resource.
  3. The first-ever Australian Association for Professional and Applied Ethics (AAPAE) Tertiary Ethics Olympiad (comparable to the Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl sponsored by America’s Association for Practical and Professional Ethics) was held earlier this week. Australian National University took the Gold and Bronze medals, and Macquarie University the silver. Congrats to them as well as honorable mention winners at the University of Melbourne and Monash University. And thanks to multiple time zone international organizer extraordinaire, Matthew Wills, for the invitation to judge. It’s always a pleasure. Even when my mid-40s brain gets a little tired after midnight 😉 Group photo below.

Balancing Humility with Principle

I’ve been reading Rabbi Joshua Liebman’s classic, Peace of Mind, and came across a section on open-mindedness and moral confidence I thought would resonate with the Ethics Bowl community.

“Tolerance is not moral apathy or easy deviation from established principles. If we say apathetically, ‘One notion is a good as another,’ we are not being tolerant; we are merely being lazy… Dense, unenlightened people are notoriously confident that they have the monopoly on truth… But anyone with the faintest glimmerings of imagination knows that truth is broader than any individual conception of it… Renan’s remark that our opinions become fixed at the point where we stop thinking should be sufficient warning against premature hardening of our intellectual arteries, or too stubborn insistence that we are infallibly and invariably right” (76).

Much of the world behaves otherwise, but cocksure arrogance vs. relativistic indifference is a false dilemma.

The mature approach, which takes time to develop, is instead one of principled humility – a desire to seek moral truth combined with a willingness to change our minds.

And that’s exactly the disposition that Ethics Bowl fosters.

Linking Ethics Bowl Cases to Philosophy Club Topics Guide

Here’s an in-depth article from EthicsBowl.org regular Michael Andersen, an Ethics Bowl coach and Philosophy Club adviser at Vancouver School of Arts & Academics. “Linking Ethics Bowl Cases to Philosophy Club Topics” [PDF copy below] will provide you some ways to extend your school’s positive energy and enthusiasm beyond the Ethics Bowl season.

I consider Michael THE authority on this sort of thing, and I’m thrilled that he’d take the time to produce this especially detailed guide for his fellow coaches, and offer it exclusively here at EthicsBowl.org. In fact, I think we’ll host it permanently on the Resources page…

Look forward to more from Michael here on the blog. He may or may not be joining as an official co-editor!

Our Baby, My Body – NHSEB 2022-2023 Regionals Case 13 Discussion Agenda and Resource Links

Regular EthicsBowl.org contributor Michael Andersen prepared the below Philosophy Club agenda / mini-curriculum for his Ethics Bowl team and generously agreed to share it with our readers. If you know a coach, please share! This is sure to elevate the thinking of any team that takes the time to explore the hyperlinked videos, articles and other resources. And this is definitely a case we want the Ethics Bowl community considering. Enjoy, and thanks as always, Michael!

Bookable Scrimmages Now Live

As promised, the NHSEBAcademy Studio recently began offering Zoom-based supplementary coaching. Beyond the Staffed Scrimmages, teams also have the option to book a Case Brainstorm session, Presentation Consultation or Practice Q&A.

That this is free and available to any team — public or private, seasoned or rookie, near or far — is marvelous. Coaching on the public speaking aspects will help so many inexperienced and shy participants. And I think the Case Brainstorms will be especially helpful. So often we get caught up in the competitive aspects. A chance to simply share ideas and explore lines of reasoning may be the best way to promote the true spirit of Ethics Bowl yet.

Special thanks to the Parr Center and Team NHSEB for making this superb resource available. Click here to check it out, and please help spread the word!

NHSEBAcademy to Facilitate Live Scrimmages Beginning November

Our friends at UNC’s Parr Center recently announced an expansion of support resources via NHSEBAcademy. As the announcement mentioned, these include “some additional video content added to our Theater, including videos from the Parr Center’s exciting new collaboration with TED-Ed, and content from our partners at the APPE Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl.”

The Ted-Ed collaboration is big news. But what really caught my attention was the promise of live expert-judged scrimmaging.

“NHSEBAcademy’s Coaching Studio has been revamped and now offers on-demand appointments every day of the week and across multiple time zones. In November, the Studio will be updated to include an option for live, online practice scrimmages, moderated and judged by Ethics Bowl experts from the Parr Center. We’re also still working to assemble a fantastic slate of events for NHSEB community members in the NHSEBAcademy Live series, starting with our popular Ethics Bowl Essentials clinics next month, for which registration is now open. More events in this series will be announced later in the Fall, so please stay tuned.”

I know of no activity that better prepares teams for actual Ethics Bowls than scrimmaging. To the extent you can replicate the real thing, they’ll be that much more successful come showtime. And it doesn’t get much more realistic than this.

If you’re a participant or coach and would like to be kept in the loop, just visit NHSEBAcademy’s home page and scroll down to the bottom to sign up for email alerts. And thanks for the awesome and constantly-improving resources, Team Parr!

Philosophy Club Agenda Examples

Michael Andersen, Volunteer Ethics Bowl Coach and Philosophy Club Adviser at the Vancouver School of Arts & Academics in Washington State, generously agreed to share the below philosophy club agendas. But more than mere agendas, I’d consider them full mini-curriculum.

I’ve come across quite a few pre-college philosophy learning materials. But I know of none anywhere that match Michael’s mix of gravitas, thoroughness and engagement. Videos, visuals, links to further resources? These are best-in-class resources, folks.

So if you need ideas on how to take your own Philosophy, Ethics Bowl or Ethics Olympiad club to the next level, look no further. And thanks as always for sharing, Michael!

Ethics in a Nutshell Full Audiobook Now on YouTube

As I mentioned in a previous post, I recently took my nephew skydiving, and in the process decided to give away my books. (Facing mortality at the speed of gravity inspires clarity!)

My philosophical ethics primer, used by college, high school and even jr. high students on at least three continents, has been available on the Resources page in PDF here at EthicsBowl.org for several years. And I released the audiobook at Audible last summer. But as of this morning, the audiobook edition is now free and available to all on good old YouTube.

Enjoy! I hope this helps students lacking the stamina or time to read (reading wasn’t my #1 hobby growing up, either), as well as educators and Ethics Bowl coaches brave enough to teach them. Re-introducing philosopher’s approach to morality, now rather than in 100 pages, 100 minutes.

Handy Timestamps (also in description at YouTube):

Ch 1: Welcome 00:24

Ch 2: Ethics, Religion & Public Discourse 09:17

Ch 3: Why Ethics Isn’t Ice Cream 14:08

Ch 4: Three Key Distinctions 22:40

Ch 5: The Four Dominant Ethical Theories 30:36

Ch 6: All Things Considered 59:38

Ch 7: Argument by Analogy 1:07:35

Ch 8: Intuition, Reflection & Coherence 1:17:15

Ch 9: Conclusion 1:24:14

Lecture Notes 1:28:13

More Books by Matt Deaton 1:35:19

Further Reading 1:38:45

And don’t forget about the lecture videos and other resources at EthicsinaNutshell.org .