Debate programs are important because they cultivate critical thinking, enhance communication and public speaking skills, and increase confidence. Credit: Getty Images

In the 2007 historical film The Great Debaters, Denzel Washington played the role of poet and professor Melvin B. Tolson, who taught at the predominantly Black Wiley College in 1935 Texas. 

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He decides to start a debate team of strong-minded, intelligent young students, and they become the first Black debate team to challenge Harvard’s prestigious debate champions.

The movie inspired a new generation of debaters and sparked broader conversations about perseverance, racial injustice, and the power of education. 

โ€œGentlemen and lady, debate is combat, but your weapons are words,โ€ Washingtonโ€™s character famously says in the film. โ€œDebate is blood sport, you must destroy your opponent, not only verbally but physicallyโ€ฆWe are here to debate, to use our minds.”

That moment was history drawn from real HBCU (Historically Black colleges and universities) students who, during segregation, used logic and language to challenge power in a world that silenced them.

Nearly a century later, that spirit lives on through students in todayโ€™s tumultuous political climate. The revival of interest in debate competition encourages them to use intellectual discourse as a tool for change and a formidable weapon against misinformation and inflammatory online rhetoric.

Texas Southern University debate team members are practicing for a competition. Courtesy: Texas Southern University/via Facebook

Dr. Gloria Batiste-Roberts, director and coach of the world-renowned Texas Southern University Debate Team, keeps that same lesson alive in a debate program that has long offered Black students a stage to build power for the last 50 years. 

โ€œDebate gives students a passion to develop resources, define truth, and communicate clearly,โ€ Roberts said. โ€œItโ€™s the greatest form of mentorship.โ€

The Hechinger Report reports a decline in civics education in schools nationwide, citing fear among teachers and principals of discussing such topics in a divided society. Social media amplifies misinformation, and the costs of competition can lock out students from low-income communities. 

For young Black students, these problems compound longstanding barriers, under-resourced schools, fewer coaches from similar backgrounds, and circuits where HBCUs are often the only Black teams.

โ€œWeโ€™re fighting misinformation and teaching kids how to verify what they see,โ€ Roberts said. โ€œEverything that you read is not always the truth. Debate teaches them to differentiate truth from reality.โ€

Edison Sanon, a longtime debate judge and coach whoโ€™s been involved in forensics since the 1990s, says the landscape is shifting in promising ways.

โ€œKids are now getting recruited at the middle school level,โ€ Sanon said. โ€œBy the time they reach high school, theyโ€™re not just trying to find themselves, theyโ€™re ready to go. Itโ€™s amazing to watch that growth.โ€

Sanon sees debate as more than an extracurricular activity. Itโ€™s training for life. 

โ€œThey have to research both sides of an issue, even the one they donโ€™t agree with,โ€ Sanon said. โ€œThat makes them well-rounded. It teaches them that not everything is black and white.  Thereโ€™s a gray area. Debate helps them see that.โ€

From the classroom to the podium

Hanson Nwole is a TSU senior whoโ€™s been debating since middle school. He has been a participant for four years and is currently the president of TSU’s debate team. He has learned how to be a skillful listener, verify fact-based evidence, craft rebuttals, and adhere to ethical standards. 

โ€œDebate makes you understand that there are always two sides to every story. You have to know your evidence, understand your opponent, and build an argument that stands up to pressure.โ€

Hanson Nwole

โ€œDebate makes you understand that there are always two sides to every story,โ€ he said. โ€œYou have to know your evidence, understand your opponent, and build an argument that stands up to pressure.โ€

Nwole credits debate with expanding his civic imagination. Itโ€™s opened doors to meet elected officials, perform in public forums, and see how policy affects communities. He and Roberts both described how many schools in Houston and nationwide either donโ€™t offer debate or treat it as an afterthought. 

Where programs exist, they often depend on volunteer coaches or patchwork funding; travel and tournament costs are real obstacles. Thatโ€™s where partnerships and community organizing come in.

While programs like TSUโ€™s are thriving, many schools in Houstonโ€™s Black and brown neighborhoods still lack the funding or faculty to support forensics programs.

Prairie View A&M University set a personal record at the National HBCU Speech and Debate Championship in 2020, winning numerous awards. Courtesy: Prairie View University

โ€œThe biggest barrier is perception,โ€ Sanon said. โ€œKids know what basketball and football are. They see those as their way out. But they donโ€™t see debate that way yet. They think itโ€™s boring or too much work. What they donโ€™t realize is the reward is huge if you put in the effort.โ€

Sanon sees a similar transformation in the high school ranks. He frequently judges tournaments through the Houston Urban Debate League (HUDL), which serves students across HISD. 

โ€œHUDL gives students who may not have known what debate is a place to compete and shine,โ€ he said. โ€œSome of these kids donโ€™t realize their own potential until they stand up, make their case, and realize people are listening.โ€

Partnerships that widen the circle

This year, TSUโ€™s Freeman Center is part of a new push to widen access. The Brewer Foundationโ€™s International Public Policy Forum (IPPF), a global written and oral debate competition founded by the Brewer Foundation in 2001 and administered jointly with NYU, announced a partnership with TSU for its 25th anniversary season. 

TSU students will serve as judges and mentors in the IPPF, which invites high school teams worldwide to debate pressing policy questions and culminates in an all-expenses-paid trip to New York for final rounds.

โ€œThe IPPF was founded to connect the best young minds with the issues that shape our world,โ€ said William A. Brewer III, chairman of the Brewer Foundation in a statement. โ€œThe Texas Southern University Debate Team is a championship program. The team’s involvement with IPPF is a plus for the tournament and its participants.โ€

It provides mentorship, global exposure, and funding pathways for students who might otherwise never have the opportunity to travel for competitions. It also boosts visibility for HBCU programs that frequently compete as the only Black teams on the circuit. 

TSU plans to host an HBCU tournament designed to strengthen inter-HBCU competition and pipeline-building among Black schools that have historically had fewer opportunities to compete.


SIDE BAR:

DEBATE RESOURCES

Houston Urban Debate League (HUDL)

  • Serves dozens of HISD middle and high schools.
  • Focused on engaging Black and Latino students in competitive debate.
  • Offers coaching, tournaments, and college prep support.

Harris County Department of Education โ€“ CASE Debates

  • A program within HCDEโ€™s โ€œCASE for Kidsโ€ division, providing debate opportunities for underserved youth at no cost.
  • Partners with schools and training programs to build debate skills in students who might not otherwise have access.

I cover Houston's education system as it relates to the Black community for the Defender as a Report for America corps member. I'm a multimedia journalist and have reported on social, cultural, lifestyle,...