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Global AI Debates


Global AI Debates Global AI Debates Global AI Debates
Home
Directors
Register
Donate|Support
The AI World
Debating Issues
Prizes
Use in Education
Open Source
General Solutions
Public Speaking Rubric
Online Debate Format
Global Inequality
Children and Robots
Essay Rubric
More
  • Home
  • Directors
  • Register
  • Donate|Support
  • The AI World
  • Debating Issues
  • Prizes
  • Use in Education
  • Open Source
  • General Solutions
  • Public Speaking Rubric
  • Online Debate Format
  • Global Inequality
  • Children and Robots
  • Essay Rubric
  • Home
  • Directors
  • Register
  • Donate|Support
  • The AI World
  • Debating Issues
  • Prizes
  • Use in Education
  • Open Source
  • General Solutions
  • Public Speaking Rubric
  • Online Debate Format
  • Global Inequality
  • Children and Robots
  • Essay Rubric

Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms

Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms

Register Today


1,000 entries/10,000 students


Influence the Global AI Conversation



Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms

Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms Join Students from Around the World Engage AI Literacy On Your Terms

Register Today


1,000 entries/10,000 students


Influence the Global AI Conversation



Finalists

FInals Shedule


Sunday, May 4th

8:30 AM -- Group Meeting emailed Zoom Link

9am Debate I -- Semifinals

11am -- Debate II -- Finals


Finalists (debating in semfinals)


Flourishing (Top 4 advancing to semfinals0

Arnav Argarwal & Aadith Kacholai, Speech & Debate India

Lida Sampson & Roden Hartsough, Canada

Kate Kim & Marley Han, NAVI

Ava Alperin, Celine Bell, Calleigh Meta, Estella Stevens, Hanna Taylor, Marymount


Generative AI (Top 4 will be nottified on April 28th and will debate in the semifinals)


Varsha Reddy & Devika Joshi, Speech & Debate India

Jajodia & Ranka, Speech & Debate India

Selina Chen & Charmaine Lam, Vancouver Debate Academy

Kharandikar & Macchar, Speech & Debate India

Krish Bhakta & Jaiden Bhakta, GT/Alpha

Darcy McLean, Adelaide

Everest Nevraumont to the team with Lucas Sanner, Georgetown/GT Alpha

Alexander Shae, Elizabeth Choi, Elizabeth Prainito, Olivia Fung, Paul Shim, NAVI

Jinghan Su & Jason Wu, Independent


Poverty

Charlotte Ellison & Eleanor Drive, Adelaide

Emma Sun & Shine Wu, BL UBC

Winner

Austin Choe, Anderson Song & Luke Shim, NAVI


Advancing Videos


 

Siddharth Bowman
Fans Guo
Katie Lin
Siddarth Gowthaman

Shreyha Mehta

Max Zhang

Vicky Zhao

Wallace Guo


Ages 8-9: Children should be allowed to have robot pets

(500-word essay)

Ages 10-11: Students should be able to use generative AI in school (1,000-word essay)

Ages 12-13: Students should be able to use 

generative AI in school (1,500 words)

Ages 14-15: AI developments will reduce global poverty (2,000 word essay)

Ages 16-18: AI will enhance human flourishing (2,000 words)

Ages 19-22: AI will enhance human flourishing or (students pick) Frontier AI models should be open source (2,500-word essay)

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Institutional Supporters: BoodleBox.ai; Educating4ai.com; GSU+ASV Perplexity.ai, DebaterHub; DebateU

Competition Logistics

Debate Competition Logistics

Update

All essays and video submissions have now been received.


*All advancing entries will be notified on Tuesday, April 1st

*The first elimination (quarterfinals) will occur betwwen April 8 & April 14 (based on mutual scheduling)

*The second elimination (semifinals) will occur between April 15 & April 21 (based on mutual scheduling)

*The finals will occurr between April 21 & April 30th (based on mutual scheduling)


The first elimination round for those who submitted debate essays will be an online debate.

Videos will automatically advance

Receive Competition Updates

Founding Institutions

Modus Ponens Institute

Modus Ponens Institute

Modus Ponens Institute

modusponensinstitute.com

DebateUS!

Modus Ponens Institute

Modus Ponens Institute

debateus.org

TKE Ethics

Modus Ponens Institute

TKE Ethics

tkethics.org

 We are dedicated to making AI literacy a shared journey—one that unfolds through debate, discussion, and collaborative discovery, equipping our community with the tools to foster the development an informed and inclusive digital future.

Partners

UC Berkeley Debate

Speech & Debate India

Speech & Debate India

 

Speech & Debate India

Speech & Debate India

Speech & Debate India

The AI Club

Speech & Debate India

The AI Club

 

The AI Club

Rong Hong Education Consultants

The AI Club

 

Rong Hong Education Consultants

Rong Hong Education Consultants

Rong Hong Education Consultants

 

West Nottingham Academy

Rong Hong Education Consultants

Rong Hong Education Consultants

Elimination Round Judges

Dr. Manolis Kellis, MIT

Dr. Leanne Lindsey, AZ Institute for the Economy and Education

Claire Zau, Partner and AI Lead, GSV Ventures

Claire Zau, Partner and AI Lead, GSV Ventures

Dr. Leanne Lindsey, AZ Institute for the Economy and Education

Claire Zau, Partner and AI Lead, GSV Ventures

Dr. Leanne Lindsey, AZ Institute for the Economy and Education

Dr. Leanne Lindsey, AZ Institute for the Economy and Education

Dr. Leanne Lindsey, AZ Institute for the Economy and Education

Judges

Tina Austin

Lecturer, Innovative Lecturer in generative AI | Regenerative Medicine and ethics, UCLA


Amy Bauschard

Professor, Early childhood Education, Mercyhurst University


James Bedford

UNSW College


Amanda Bickerstaff

Founder, AI for Education


Justin Bruno

AI Strategist @ Michigan Virtual


Dr. Jennifer Camille Dempsey 

Director, PennWest Center for AI and Emerging Technologies


Joe Carver

Associate Head of School, The Meadows School


David Coale

Partner at Lynn Pinker Hurst & Schwegmann, LLP


Darren Coxon

Founder of Node.edu


Dr. Alan Coverstone

Founder, Covariant Education


Jerry Crisci

Co-founder of the Center for Innovation at the Scarsdale Public Schools


Vera Cubero

Emerging Technologies Consultant

North Carolina Department of Public Instruction 


Dr. Laura Dumin

AI Institute, American Association of Colleges and Universities


Matthew Esterman

Founder / Director - The Next Word


Benjamin Durham

Ploto, Ethical Data Collection Solutions


Sofia Fenichells

Founder, StudyHall.ai


Eric Fraser

CTO, Dr. Lisa AI


Dr. Thomas Goodnight

Professor, USC; identified as one of the top 5 scholars in argumentation in the twentieth century


Alex Gray

AI Network Lead, British Schools in the Middle East


Dr. Jason Gulya

Chair, AI Council, Berkeley College


Aaron Hardy

Debate Coach, UC Berkeley


Rich Heimann

Director of Artificial Intelligence

State of South Carolina


Dr. David Hingstman

Directore of Debate, Iowa (retired)

J.D. Harvard Law School


John Hines

Co-Founder, DebaterHub.com (AI)|


Rosalie (Roz) Hirch

Phd candidate in Linguistics & Technology


Maim Hoque

Senior Business Consultant, IBM


Dr. James Hutson

PHds in Art and Artificial Intelligence

Lindenwood University


Alex Iftimie

Deputy General Counsel, OpenAI


Dr. Michelle Kassorla

Professor of English & Technology, Georgia State 

Perimeter


Dr. Michael Kearney

Associate Manager, Data Science - Development & AI, Meijer


Zach Kinzler

Boodlebox.ai


Wes Kriesel

AI Manager, Orange County Department of Education


Mary Lang

Center for Leadership, Equity, and Research (CLEAR), Stanford University


Annie Liao

Founder, Build Club


Melissa Loble

Chief Academic Officer, Instructure (Canvas)


Dr. LeAnne Lindsey

Director of EdTech and Innovation, AZ Institute for Education and the Economy


Brian Manuel

Former Director of Policy Debate, Stanford University


Paul Matthews

CEO, MyTeacherAide


Lori Mazor

Founder, Synthetivity.ai


Devika Mehta

Deputy Editor, Jagran New Media


Susan Morrisey

Roach Leadership Center, AI Consultant, Boston College


Dr. Kimberly Pace-Becker

Iowa State & Moxie Academic Labs



Dr. Sabba Quidwai

Founder, Designing Schools


Dr. Anand Rao

Chair, Department of Communication & Digital Studies

University of Mary Washington


Tom Rogerson

Headmaster, Cottesmore School (UK)


Rebecca Rutschmann

Coaching & AI Consultant


Silvio Sangineto

AI Design Leader, Microsoft


Arlo Sporn

Philosopher, Corporate Lawyers


Theo Stapleton

PhD University of Cambridge


Nisha Talagala

Founder & CEO, AI Club


Ryan Tannenbaum

Founder, for.education


Dr. Tatjana Titareva

Titareva AI Education Consultancy


Sophie Theodoro

Designing Schools


Ghazali bin Abdul Wahab

Nanyang Technological University Singapore 


Edward Williams

Debate Coach, Harvard Debate Council


Dr. Jessica Yeats

Principal Data Scientist, Autonomous Vehicles, NVIDIA


Dr. Joseph Zompetti

Full Professor of Communication, Illinois State


Frequently Asked Questions

Please reach us at Stefan.Bauschard@gmail.com if you cannot find an answer to your question.

Schools/institutions can place any number of students on a team to write the essay. If the school team advances, the school must select two students per entry to debate online. The online debate format is 2 vs. 2.


Schools/institutions can submit as many video entries for the public speaking contest as they wish.


Schools can submit as many essays as they wish, but the students in each group must take responsibility for writing a particular essay. If a particular essay advances, the students who wrote it must compete online. Each entry must be supported by a separate fee, but the fee covers as many students in a group as the school wishes.


Yes, but they must pay both entry fees.


Non-school entries may participate, but they must either be part of an institution (for example, an after-school program) or assumed responsibility for by an adult (21+).  The adult must submit the entry. 


Every essay will be reviewed by 3 judges, with scores averaged. For the video debates, each debate will have 3 judges, with the students receiving the majority of votes in each debate advancing. We may add an AI judge to each stage of the competition. A rubric will be provided to the judges that the students will be able to see before they submit their essays and participate in any online debates. All essays will be anonymously reviewed (no student or school information will be present).


The same applies to the video. 


Students may use as much or as little AI as they wish when submitting their essays. The important thing to consider is if the essay meets the rubric criteria and if the students will be prepared to verbally defend their arguments as well as rebut their opponents’ arguments in the elimination debates.   


Elimination judges are listed above. Preliminary judges are college students, graduate students, and teachers.


We will advance up to 64 teams in each division, but no more than half the number of teams in any division (+1 if needed to get to an even number) will advance.


There is a $125 USD entry fee per submission if paid by December 1, 2024.


A "submission" is defined as the initial essay. You may have as many students as you want work on a single essay, but if the essay advances past the written rounds (the second round), you must choose two students to debate from among those who submitted the essay.  Institutions may submit as many essays as they wish, but there is a separate entry fee for each submission. There is no additional judging fee. 


*The price will increase to $150/entry on December 2nd

*The price will increase to $175 on January 1 

*The price will increase to $225 on February 1


Note that you do not need the names of the students at this point to register. You only need the anticipated number of entries to register.


Fees for the public speaking contest are


$100 until December 1st

$125 December 1st-January 1st

$175 January 1st-February 1st

$225 February 1st-March 1st



Entries fees will be utilized to support the administration of the tournament, including small payments to the preliminary debate judges who will be reading a lot of essays and videos. Any financial surplus will be used to facilitate societal debates and discussion on AI. We are currently raising money to provide prizes for those who reach the elimination rounds.


Yes, we will make materials to support student preparation available on the website. We will also make other materials available in order to support society-wide discussion of AI. 


We will use rubrics provided to the judges to score the essays as well as the format of the elimination debates by November 15, 2024.  We will also share the judge training materials no later than February 1, 2025.

Similarly, we will provide sign-language services to any deaf students who reach the elimination debates.


English is the default language for the live debates, but will work with suppliers to provide ai-driven translation technologies if students wish to speak in other languages.

Similarly, we will provide sign-language services to any deaf students who reach the elimination debates.


We are actively seeking event sponsors and sponsors of the age-based divisions.  We hope to provide scholarship prizes to all of the division winners and 2nd place contestants.


Letter from the Founders


Powerful individuals and corporations with staggering wealth and influence are leading us into a new industrial revolution defined by artificial intelligence (AI). On its current trajectory, AI is aimed at replicating and then exceeding human-level intelligence. This AI will redefine everything, from our personal relationships to education, work, and even the very beginning and end of life.


While this technological transformation is likely inevitable, it is through our collective action that we can each find our home in this new world in a way that promotes human flourishing. The future of AI belongs to all of us, not just the limited number of individuals who are currently driving its development


Global AI Debates was created to empower students to become active participants in shaping the AI revolution, including what it means to be "AI Literate." We believe that AI literacy is not something that should be co-created through open dialogue and exchange across all members of society, including the AI systems themselves.


The decisions we make today about AI will echo through the generations. This is a chance to be part of that crucial conversation and help define the world you want to live in. Get involved in the Global AI Debates - the future is yours to shape.

 It is my bias that the students themselves will start to drive this conversation. This is already starting to happen in some spaces. This is why I have said many times before that debating is one of the most important skills we can teach students in the era of AI.  Dwayne Matthews, TomorrowNow Learning Labs, XPRIZE Advisor

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