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Introduction

Introduction ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 27 (Fall 1 990): 45-48 RGUMENTATION ND DVOCACY SPECIAL ISSUE: A VARIETY OF FORMATS FOR THE DEBATE EXPERIENCE James F. Klumpp, editor Editing a special issue of a journal is thing of the world you describe, and the always an experience sure to teach some­ uninitiated administrators and others who thing unexpected about the subject matter are unaware of the activity you know." of the issue. Certainly the current issue has Generally, our authors do an admirable lived up to that expectation. When a job of addressing both these audiences. member of our editorial board suggested The essays serve as a marvelous sweep of this topic to me early in my editorship, our the options open to a debate program vision was a sort of manual of debate forms today, particularly at the college level. But probably most useful to the nascent direc­ as we edited the issue, several other tor. We worried aloud about whether such characteristics of the contemporary world an issue would be of interest to a broad of academic debate emerged. These char­ spectrum of our readership. We knew that acteristics assure that our issue will be read many of our readers http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Argumentation and Advocacy Taylor & Francis

Introduction

Argumentation and Advocacy , Volume 27 (2): 4 – Sep 1, 1990

Introduction

Abstract

ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 27 (Fall 1 990): 45-48 RGUMENTATION ND DVOCACY SPECIAL ISSUE: A VARIETY OF FORMATS FOR THE DEBATE EXPERIENCE James F. Klumpp, editor Editing a special issue of a journal is thing of the world you describe, and the always an experience sure to teach some­ uninitiated administrators and others who thing unexpected about the subject matter are unaware of the activity you know." of the issue. Certainly the current issue has Generally, our authors do an...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 1990 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
2576-8476
eISSN
1051-1431
DOI
10.1080/00028533.1990.11951508
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 27 (Fall 1 990): 45-48 RGUMENTATION ND DVOCACY SPECIAL ISSUE: A VARIETY OF FORMATS FOR THE DEBATE EXPERIENCE James F. Klumpp, editor Editing a special issue of a journal is thing of the world you describe, and the always an experience sure to teach some­ uninitiated administrators and others who thing unexpected about the subject matter are unaware of the activity you know." of the issue. Certainly the current issue has Generally, our authors do an admirable lived up to that expectation. When a job of addressing both these audiences. member of our editorial board suggested The essays serve as a marvelous sweep of this topic to me early in my editorship, our the options open to a debate program vision was a sort of manual of debate forms today, particularly at the college level. But probably most useful to the nascent direc­ as we edited the issue, several other tor. We worried aloud about whether such characteristics of the contemporary world an issue would be of interest to a broad of academic debate emerged. These char­ spectrum of our readership. We knew that acteristics assure that our issue will be read many of our readers

Journal

Argumentation and AdvocacyTaylor & Francis

Published: Sep 1, 1990

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