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Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail?

  – Discussion in progress.

Have you discussed this on a talk page?

Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already.

Location of dispute

Users involved

Dispute overview

Public forum is a debate format sanctioned by the National Speech and Debate Association. The debates delve deep into topics ranging from standardized testing to UN peacekeepers to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to East African humanitarian aid. The format is complex as well, with debaters required to use time management and speech strategies to engage with their opponents' arguments as well as defend their own.

The public forum page has been the subject of dispute for quite some time now. For the past several months, the discussion had largely centered around the list of resolutions (topics that each debate focuses on, generally a policy action like "The US should abolish the capital gains tax") that was on the page. The page had documented the entire list of public forum resolutions since 2006. Several users had argued for its removal (Pinkbeast) and several had argued for its inclusion (myself). The eventual consensus was that given other places it could be found, as well as the length it added to the article, the list would be removed.

Pinkbeast then took it several steps further, removing nearly all the information about public forum from the page, including the speech times, descriptions of those speeches, information about governing bodies, the mechanics of a round, information about resolutions and their selection process, leaving the page with an extremely brief description of public forum.

There has been significant discussion of these issues on the talk page. I personally do not believe Pinkbeast has sufficiently justified their position, and they have taken it upon themselves to remove all additional information editors have added.

There is an additional discussion about the role of the National Speech and Debate Association about topics - it's not directly relevant to the main discussion (hence its separate talk section) but it may be instructive in the type of discussion that's been had.

Have you tried to resolve this previously?

1. Discussion on talk page 2. Additional cites added to back some statements up 3. Extensive quoting and explanation of linked cites 4. Editing of page to remove portions of the "instructional" information about public forum; this edit was quickly reverted, with Pinkbeast seeming dead-set against this compromise

How do you think we can help?

I hope to see some additional explanation from the other side - I don't think they've been all too forthcoming with an explanation, which I really thin would clear up our disagreement. I also hope that the clash between our viewpoints can be resolved, since I don't think there's been sufficient resolution thus far. Finally, I'd like to see a clarification of this page's situation, specifically abut the necessity or non-necessity of information there.

Summary of dispute by Pinkbeast

I'm not sure I can add much to what I have already written on the talk page, but first:

Should the page simply be AFDed or merged into another page? It passed AFD by a narrow margin in 2007. In my view a merge might be best, but I'd be reluctant to propose it myself without some indication other disinterested editors agree.

To me the list of round lengths is obviously instructional material. "Short (2-4 minute) speeches that are interspersed with 3 minute "crossfire" sections, questions and answers between opposed debaters" describes the format perfectly well. You only need the exact list of round lengths if you want to hold such a debate.

The list of previous topics was colossal, clearly being given undue weight, and "a proposal of a potential solution to a current events issue" gives a good idea of what sort of thing they entail. I wouldn't be opposed to including one or two if sources independent of PF debate have taken note of them, indicating that those were more significant. (This is not an unreasonable requirement; national newspapers sometimes report on The Cambridge Union's debates, and that is a single debating society, albeit a venerable and well known one, not a nationwide organisation.)

My objection to the assertion that the NSDA prepares topics is simply that it was uncited. I expect in the near future Cut Card will produce a cite (that, say, actually mentions the NSDA) and then obviously it can be inserted. Pinkbeast (talk) 20:31, 25 January 2019 (UTC)

Summary of dispute by RBGMacaroni

I began editing the Public Forum page to add detail to a bare-bones page that lacked detail compared to articles about other forms of debate like Lincoln-Douglas and Policy. My additional information has repeatedly been removed with no real explanation as to why. The only comment has been Pinkbeast's repeated complaint about excessive detail but I don't know what constitutes that and any outside observer can clearly see the complete lack of information on the PF wikipedia page as compared to other forms of debate.

In my view, listing the particular speeches of a Public Forum round is not excessive or instructional. Simply listing the speeches does not tell any debater how to speak or what to say. Additionally, speech order and structure is part of what defines Public Forum because it differentiates it from other debate forms.

The listing of topics can be done more briefly, but eliminating any examples at all hinders understanding of what exactly a typical PF resolution constitutes.

My general complaint is that any new information about Public Forum is rapidly taken down with little explanation as to why.

Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail? discussion

Please keep discussion to a minimum before being opened by a volunteer. Continue on article talk page if necessary.
  • Volunteer note - There has been adequate discussion on the talk page. The other editors have been notified. Robert McClenon (talk) 00:22, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - @DRN volunteers: - A volunteer is needed to moderate the discussion. Robert McClenon (talk) 05:05, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  •   Volunteer note: Hello, I am volunteering to moderate this discussion. Having read the article and the relevant section of the talk page, I would just like to clarify that the dispute is over whether the currently deleted Debate Structure section has value to a reader of the article other than as instructional content. RobbieM13 (talk) 21:18, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni - The moderator last posted five days ago, and is waiting for comments. Please comment within 24 hours. Robert McClenon (talk) 04:26, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: Sorry, I didn't realize that the moderator's comment was a question. I thought they'd ask us questions or something, I'm new to the dispute resolution process. I've looked at the edit mentioned, and I do agree that its content seems to be more expressly instructional than necessary. However, the main dispute was not over that edit, nor the list of resolutions, to be clear, but about past edits, specifically ones concerning the mechanics of public forum (see an edit made by myself) and a smaller list of example resolutions and their importance. Cut card (talk) 04:35, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - I think we should focus on a specific section of the argument at a time, rather than making blanket statements about the deleted content as a whole. Firstly, the "Format" section. It appears to have a lot of overlap with the second statement in the introduction; the one discussing the basic structure, which could perhaps indicate it is superfluous. On the other hand, as Public Forum debate seems to be (at least to my limited knowledge) a very standardised/standardized (is British English allowed?) format, perhaps a specific description of the way it works is valid. If the editors (User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni) could comment on this, we might be able to move towards a compromise on this aspect at least. RobbieM13 (talk) 14:31, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: The format section shouldn't have that overlap. I don't really think the introduction needs the information that talks about the speeches, just an overview of the goals of public forum or something. (It also needs some cleaning up formatting-wise.) Every public forum debate has the same structure, and it really makes public forum what it is. The symmetry sets it apart from Lincoln-Douglas, and the short lengths separate it from policy. Its conventions, like slower speaking and simpler argumentation is also essential to defining the format. Much of that information was omitted in the last edit I made, in an attempt to compromise on what User:Pinkbeast saw as "instructional," but if possible I think it'd help describe public forum much better than is currently done. Cut card (talk) 03:23, 5 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note The sources, including those sources deleted in the sections being discussed, seem to back up a lot of what you're saying, and I do agree that information on what makes Public Forum what it is is necessary for the page to be useful. If you limit the information you include strictly to facts and conclusions made in the references, then, to my view, additional content would be valid. Pinkbeast's complaints seem to be (and as he does not seem to have contributed to the discussion since his initial summary, we must rely on this for now) about citation, so perhaps you could includce a citation documenting the name change of NFL to NSDA to show that all the sources are talking about the same organisation. We will make no progress in resolving the dispute until User:Pinkbeast will contribute to the discussion, however I would suggest that, as long as you stick strictly to the information contained in the citations, the detail is not excessive. — Preceding unsigned comment added by RobbieM13 (talkcontribs) 10:52, 6 February 2019 (UTC)

Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail?

  – Discussion in progress.

Have you discussed this on a talk page?

Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already.

Location of dispute

Users involved

Dispute overview

Public forum is a debate format sanctioned by the National Speech and Debate Association. The debates delve deep into topics ranging from standardized testing to UN peacekeepers to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to East African humanitarian aid. The format is complex as well, with debaters required to use time management and speech strategies to engage with their opponents' arguments as well as defend their own.

The public forum page has been the subject of dispute for quite some time now. For the past several months, the discussion had largely centered around the list of resolutions (topics that each debate focuses on, generally a policy action like "The US should abolish the capital gains tax") that was on the page. The page had documented the entire list of public forum resolutions since 2006. Several users had argued for its removal (Pinkbeast) and several had argued for its inclusion (myself). The eventual consensus was that given other places it could be found, as well as the length it added to the article, the list would be removed.

Pinkbeast then took it several steps further, removing nearly all the information about public forum from the page, including the speech times, descriptions of those speeches, information about governing bodies, the mechanics of a round, information about resolutions and their selection process, leaving the page with an extremely brief description of public forum.

There has been significant discussion of these issues on the talk page. I personally do not believe Pinkbeast has sufficiently justified their position, and they have taken it upon themselves to remove all additional information editors have added.

There is an additional discussion about the role of the National Speech and Debate Association about topics - it's not directly relevant to the main discussion (hence its separate talk section) but it may be instructive in the type of discussion that's been had.

Have you tried to resolve this previously?

1. Discussion on talk page 2. Additional cites added to back some statements up 3. Extensive quoting and explanation of linked cites 4. Editing of page to remove portions of the "instructional" information about public forum; this edit was quickly reverted, with Pinkbeast seeming dead-set against this compromise

How do you think we can help?

I hope to see some additional explanation from the other side - I don't think they've been all too forthcoming with an explanation, which I really thin would clear up our disagreement. I also hope that the clash between our viewpoints can be resolved, since I don't think there's been sufficient resolution thus far. Finally, I'd like to see a clarification of this page's situation, specifically abut the necessity or non-necessity of information there.

Summary of dispute by Pinkbeast

I'm not sure I can add much to what I have already written on the talk page, but first:

Should the page simply be AFDed or merged into another page? It passed AFD by a narrow margin in 2007. In my view a merge might be best, but I'd be reluctant to propose it myself without some indication other disinterested editors agree.

To me the list of round lengths is obviously instructional material. "Short (2-4 minute) speeches that are interspersed with 3 minute "crossfire" sections, questions and answers between opposed debaters" describes the format perfectly well. You only need the exact list of round lengths if you want to hold such a debate.

The list of previous topics was colossal, clearly being given undue weight, and "a proposal of a potential solution to a current events issue" gives a good idea of what sort of thing they entail. I wouldn't be opposed to including one or two if sources independent of PF debate have taken note of them, indicating that those were more significant. (This is not an unreasonable requirement; national newspapers sometimes report on The Cambridge Union's debates, and that is a single debating society, albeit a venerable and well known one, not a nationwide organisation.)

My objection to the assertion that the NSDA prepares topics is simply that it was uncited. I expect in the near future Cut Card will produce a cite (that, say, actually mentions the NSDA) and then obviously it can be inserted. Pinkbeast (talk) 20:31, 25 January 2019 (UTC)

Summary of dispute by RBGMacaroni

I began editing the Public Forum page to add detail to a bare-bones page that lacked detail compared to articles about other forms of debate like Lincoln-Douglas and Policy. My additional information has repeatedly been removed with no real explanation as to why. The only comment has been Pinkbeast's repeated complaint about excessive detail but I don't know what constitutes that and any outside observer can clearly see the complete lack of information on the PF wikipedia page as compared to other forms of debate.

In my view, listing the particular speeches of a Public Forum round is not excessive or instructional. Simply listing the speeches does not tell any debater how to speak or what to say. Additionally, speech order and structure is part of what defines Public Forum because it differentiates it from other debate forms.

The listing of topics can be done more briefly, but eliminating any examples at all hinders understanding of what exactly a typical PF resolution constitutes.

My general complaint is that any new information about Public Forum is rapidly taken down with little explanation as to why.

Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail? discussion

Please keep discussion to a minimum before being opened by a volunteer. Continue on article talk page if necessary.
  • Volunteer note - There has been adequate discussion on the talk page. The other editors have been notified. Robert McClenon (talk) 00:22, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - @DRN volunteers: - A volunteer is needed to moderate the discussion. Robert McClenon (talk) 05:05, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  •   Volunteer note: Hello, I am volunteering to moderate this discussion. Having read the article and the relevant section of the talk page, I would just like to clarify that the dispute is over whether the currently deleted Debate Structure section has value to a reader of the article other than as instructional content. RobbieM13 (talk) 21:18, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni - The moderator last posted five days ago, and is waiting for comments. Please comment within 24 hours. Robert McClenon (talk) 04:26, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: Sorry, I didn't realize that the moderator's comment was a question. I thought they'd ask us questions or something, I'm new to the dispute resolution process. I've looked at the edit mentioned, and I do agree that its content seems to be more expressly instructional than necessary. However, the main dispute was not over that edit, nor the list of resolutions, to be clear, but about past edits, specifically ones concerning the mechanics of public forum (see an edit made by myself) and a smaller list of example resolutions and their importance. Cut card (talk) 04:35, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - I think we should focus on a specific section of the argument at a time, rather than making blanket statements about the deleted content as a whole. Firstly, the "Format" section. It appears to have a lot of overlap with the second statement in the introduction; the one discussing the basic structure, which could perhaps indicate it is superfluous. On the other hand, as Public Forum debate seems to be (at least to my limited knowledge) a very standardised/standardized (is British English allowed?) format, perhaps a specific description of the way it works is valid. If the editors (User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni) could comment on this, we might be able to move towards a compromise on this aspect at least. RobbieM13 (talk) 14:31, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: The format section shouldn't have that overlap. I don't really think the introduction needs the information that talks about the speeches, just an overview of the goals of public forum or something. (It also needs some cleaning up formatting-wise.) Every public forum debate has the same structure, and it really makes public forum what it is. The symmetry sets it apart from Lincoln-Douglas, and the short lengths separate it from policy. Its conventions, like slower speaking and simpler argumentation is also essential to defining the format. Much of that information was omitted in the last edit I made, in an attempt to compromise on what User:Pinkbeast saw as "instructional," but if possible I think it'd help describe public forum much better than is currently done. Cut card (talk) 03:23, 5 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note The sources, including those sources deleted in the sections being discussed, seem to back up a lot of what you're saying, and I do agree that information on what makes Public Forum what it is is necessary for the page to be useful. If you limit the information you include strictly to facts and conclusions made in the references, then, to my view, additional content would be valid. Pinkbeast's complaints seem to be (and as he does not seem to have contributed to the discussion since his initial summary, we must rely on this for now) about citation, so perhaps you could includce a citation documenting the name change of NFL to NSDA to show that all the sources are talking about the same organisation. We will make no progress in resolving the dispute until User:Pinkbeast will contribute to the discussion, however I would suggest that, as long as you stick strictly to the information contained in the citations, the detail is not excessive. — Preceding unsigned comment added by RobbieM13 (talkcontribs) 10:52, 6 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: It's now been five days, User:Pinkbeast should contribute to this discussion. I believe this version strikes the right balance between necessary information about the format, and avoiding unnecessary instructional information. Cut card (talk) 16:31, 11 February 2019 (UTC)

Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail?

  – Discussion in progress.

Have you discussed this on a talk page?

Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already.

Location of dispute

Users involved

Dispute overview

Public forum is a debate format sanctioned by the National Speech and Debate Association. The debates delve deep into topics ranging from standardized testing to UN peacekeepers to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to East African humanitarian aid. The format is complex as well, with debaters required to use time management and speech strategies to engage with their opponents' arguments as well as defend their own.

The public forum page has been the subject of dispute for quite some time now. For the past several months, the discussion had largely centered around the list of resolutions (topics that each debate focuses on, generally a policy action like "The US should abolish the capital gains tax") that was on the page. The page had documented the entire list of public forum resolutions since 2006. Several users had argued for its removal (Pinkbeast) and several had argued for its inclusion (myself). The eventual consensus was that given other places it could be found, as well as the length it added to the article, the list would be removed.

Pinkbeast then took it several steps further, removing nearly all the information about public forum from the page, including the speech times, descriptions of those speeches, information about governing bodies, the mechanics of a round, information about resolutions and their selection process, leaving the page with an extremely brief description of public forum.

There has been significant discussion of these issues on the talk page. I personally do not believe Pinkbeast has sufficiently justified their position, and they have taken it upon themselves to remove all additional information editors have added.

There is an additional discussion about the role of the National Speech and Debate Association about topics - it's not directly relevant to the main discussion (hence its separate talk section) but it may be instructive in the type of discussion that's been had.

Have you tried to resolve this previously?

1. Discussion on talk page 2. Additional cites added to back some statements up 3. Extensive quoting and explanation of linked cites 4. Editing of page to remove portions of the "instructional" information about public forum; this edit was quickly reverted, with Pinkbeast seeming dead-set against this compromise

How do you think we can help?

I hope to see some additional explanation from the other side - I don't think they've been all too forthcoming with an explanation, which I really thin would clear up our disagreement. I also hope that the clash between our viewpoints can be resolved, since I don't think there's been sufficient resolution thus far. Finally, I'd like to see a clarification of this page's situation, specifically abut the necessity or non-necessity of information there.

Summary of dispute by Pinkbeast

I'm not sure I can add much to what I have already written on the talk page, but first:

Should the page simply be AFDed or merged into another page? It passed AFD by a narrow margin in 2007. In my view a merge might be best, but I'd be reluctant to propose it myself without some indication other disinterested editors agree.

To me the list of round lengths is obviously instructional material. "Short (2-4 minute) speeches that are interspersed with 3 minute "crossfire" sections, questions and answers between opposed debaters" describes the format perfectly well. You only need the exact list of round lengths if you want to hold such a debate.

The list of previous topics was colossal, clearly being given undue weight, and "a proposal of a potential solution to a current events issue" gives a good idea of what sort of thing they entail. I wouldn't be opposed to including one or two if sources independent of PF debate have taken note of them, indicating that those were more significant. (This is not an unreasonable requirement; national newspapers sometimes report on The Cambridge Union's debates, and that is a single debating society, albeit a venerable and well known one, not a nationwide organisation.)

My objection to the assertion that the NSDA prepares topics is simply that it was uncited. I expect in the near future Cut Card will produce a cite (that, say, actually mentions the NSDA) and then obviously it can be inserted. Pinkbeast (talk) 20:31, 25 January 2019 (UTC)

Summary of dispute by RBGMacaroni

I began editing the Public Forum page to add detail to a bare-bones page that lacked detail compared to articles about other forms of debate like Lincoln-Douglas and Policy. My additional information has repeatedly been removed with no real explanation as to why. The only comment has been Pinkbeast's repeated complaint about excessive detail but I don't know what constitutes that and any outside observer can clearly see the complete lack of information on the PF wikipedia page as compared to other forms of debate.

In my view, listing the particular speeches of a Public Forum round is not excessive or instructional. Simply listing the speeches does not tell any debater how to speak or what to say. Additionally, speech order and structure is part of what defines Public Forum because it differentiates it from other debate forms.

The listing of topics can be done more briefly, but eliminating any examples at all hinders understanding of what exactly a typical PF resolution constitutes.

My general complaint is that any new information about Public Forum is rapidly taken down with little explanation as to why.

Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail? discussion

Please keep discussion to a minimum before being opened by a volunteer. Continue on article talk page if necessary.
  • Volunteer note - There has been adequate discussion on the talk page. The other editors have been notified. Robert McClenon (talk) 00:22, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - @DRN volunteers: - A volunteer is needed to moderate the discussion. Robert McClenon (talk) 05:05, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  •   Volunteer note: Hello, I am volunteering to moderate this discussion. Having read the article and the relevant section of the talk page, I would just like to clarify that the dispute is over whether the currently deleted Debate Structure section has value to a reader of the article other than as instructional content. RobbieM13 (talk) 21:18, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni - The moderator last posted five days ago, and is waiting for comments. Please comment within 24 hours. Robert McClenon (talk) 04:26, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: Sorry, I didn't realize that the moderator's comment was a question. I thought they'd ask us questions or something, I'm new to the dispute resolution process. I've looked at the edit mentioned, and I do agree that its content seems to be more expressly instructional than necessary. However, the main dispute was not over that edit, nor the list of resolutions, to be clear, but about past edits, specifically ones concerning the mechanics of public forum (see an edit made by myself) and a smaller list of example resolutions and their importance. Cut card (talk) 04:35, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note - I think we should focus on a specific section of the argument at a time, rather than making blanket statements about the deleted content as a whole. Firstly, the "Format" section. It appears to have a lot of overlap with the second statement in the introduction; the one discussing the basic structure, which could perhaps indicate it is superfluous. On the other hand, as Public Forum debate seems to be (at least to my limited knowledge) a very standardised/standardized (is British English allowed?) format, perhaps a specific description of the way it works is valid. If the editors (User:Cut card, User:Pinkbeast,User:RBGmacaroni) could comment on this, we might be able to move towards a compromise on this aspect at least. RobbieM13 (talk) 14:31, 4 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: The format section shouldn't have that overlap. I don't really think the introduction needs the information that talks about the speeches, just an overview of the goals of public forum or something. (It also needs some cleaning up formatting-wise.) Every public forum debate has the same structure, and it really makes public forum what it is. The symmetry sets it apart from Lincoln-Douglas, and the short lengths separate it from policy. Its conventions, like slower speaking and simpler argumentation is also essential to defining the format. Much of that information was omitted in the last edit I made, in an attempt to compromise on what User:Pinkbeast saw as "instructional," but if possible I think it'd help describe public forum much better than is currently done. Cut card (talk) 03:23, 5 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note The sources, including those sources deleted in the sections being discussed, seem to back up a lot of what you're saying, and I do agree that information on what makes Public Forum what it is is necessary for the page to be useful. If you limit the information you include strictly to facts and conclusions made in the references, then, to my view, additional content would be valid. Pinkbeast's complaints seem to be (and as he does not seem to have contributed to the discussion since his initial summary, we must rely on this for now) about citation, so perhaps you could includce a citation documenting the name change of NFL to NSDA to show that all the sources are talking about the same organisation. We will make no progress in resolving the dispute until User:Pinkbeast will contribute to the discussion, however I would suggest that, as long as you stick strictly to the information contained in the citations, the detail is not excessive. — Preceding unsigned comment added by RobbieM13 (talkcontribs) 10:52, 6 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: It's now been five days, User:Pinkbeast should contribute to this discussion. I believe this version strikes the right balance between necessary information about the format, and avoiding unnecessary instructional information. Cut card (talk) 16:31, 11 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Comment: This is getting ridiculous. The discussion and dispute resolution necessitates talk from both parties. User:Pinkbeast, please respond. Cut card (talk) 17:47, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Volunteer note If Cut card agrees, I think it would be best to close this thread, at least for the time being. No discussion is going on. If the dispute resumes at the Public Forum Debate page, this thread could be reopened or other measures could be taken by the participants. RobbieM13 (talk) 19:15, 14 February 2019 (UTC)

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Note: Please don't archive this yet. It pertains to a new complaint (this same one continued). 40.117.60.104 (talk) 04:16, 12 February 2019 (UTC)

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Talk:Public forum_debate#What_constitutes_excessive_detail?

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