A Better Way to Use Debate in Language Classrooms

Debate occupies a central position in many modern language classrooms, where it is frequently employed to foster extended speech, develop fluency, and encourage learners to engage with complex ideas. In these classroom debates, students are invited to discuss public policy, higher education, environmental responsibility, or social inequality. They are expected to justify positions, respond to counterarguments, and sustain structured interaction over time.

In principle, debate appears ideally suited to communicative language teaching — as it promotes interaction, spontaneity, and intellectual engagement. Yet in practice, classroom debate often yields more limited linguistic development than anticipated. Exchanges may become rapid and oppositional, with learners relying on formulaic opinion markers. For example, a student may assert, « Je pense que l’université devrait être gratuite. » (“I think university should be free.”) Another responds, « Je ne suis pas d’accord, ce serait trop coûteux. » (“I disagree, it would be too expensive.”) The interaction is active, but the linguistic range narrow.

Such exchanges are not inherently problematic. However, they frequently privilege immediate rebuttal over interpretive engagement. Learners rely predominantly on present-tense assertions and simple modal constructions. Listening functions as preparation for counterargument rather than as a discursive obligation.

This tendency reflects the adversarial structure that characterizes much of Eurocentric rhetorical tradition. In many Western academic contexts, argumentation is organized as opposition. Persuasive force and speed of response are highly valued. These norms are often presented as universal models of critical thinking, yet they are historically situated and culturally specific. When adopted uncritically in the language classroom, they shape both interactional dynamics and the grammatical forms that are most likely to emerge.

However, this Western rhetorical tradition is not the only debate model available. Alternative traditions have developed equally rigorous approaches to structured disagreement. One such approach comes from classical Indian philosophy.

Within systems such as Vedānta and Nyāya, debate was governed by disciplined procedural methods. One of these methods is known as Purvapaksha. In this framework, a thinker was required to present the opponent’s position accurately and comprehensively before offering critique. The reconstruction had to be sufficiently precise that the opponent would recognize it as fair. Only after validation could systematic refutation proceed.

This structure is visible in classical commentarial traditions, including those associated with Śakarācārya. In these works, critique depends upon prior interpretive integrity. Understanding is not rhetorical courtesy, but epistemic discipline, and representation precedes refutation.

When adapted for the language classroom, this principle produces measurable linguistic and pedagogical effects. The following examples are drawn from discussions produced by students in my own university French classes, where learners debated whether higher education should be free.

In a conventional format, a student may state:

« L’université devrait être gratuite parce que l’éducation est un droit fondamental. » (“University should be free because education is a fundamental right.”)

In a Purvapaksha-inspired format, another student must first reconstruct that argument:

« Si je comprends bien, vous estimez que l’éducation est un droit fondamental et que l’État devrait donc prendre en charge les frais universitaires. » (“If I understand correctly, you believe that education is a fundamental right and that the state should therefore cover university fees.”)

This reformulation produces significant linguistic shifts. The original statement relies on direct assertion in the present tense. The reconstructed version requires reported perspective, clause embedding, and lexical reframing. When referring back to an earlier intervention, a student might say:

« Vous avez expliqué que l’université devrait être gratuite parce que l’éducation était un droit fondamental. » (“You explained that university should be free because education was a fundamental right.”)

Here, the present tense « est » shifts to the imperfect « était » within reported speech, reflecting sequence of tense. The reporting verb « vous avez expliqué » requires accurate use of the compound past. Such morphosyntactic adjustments rarely emerge in rapid adversarial exchange. They arise because the task requires faithful reconstruction before critique.

After reconstruction, the original speaker may confirm:

« Oui, c’est cela, mais j’ai aussi souligné que cela permettrait de réduire les inégalités sociales. » (“Yes, that is correct, but I also emphasized that it would help reduce social inequalities.”)

Only once validation is achieved does critique proceed:

« Bien que vous affirmiez que la gratuité réduirait les inégalités, on pourrait se demander si cette mesure serait viable à long terme. » (“Although you argue that free tuition would reduce inequalities, one might question whether this measure would be viable in the long term.”)

The task now requires concessive clauses, modal expressions, conditional forms, and evaluative framing. Grammar becomes functionally necessary rather than formulaic.

The contrast with traditional classroom debate can be summarized as follows:

Feature Traditional/Western Debate Purvapaksha-Inspired Debate
Primary Discursive Move Express personal opinion Reconstruct opponent’s position before critique
Tense Usage Predominantly present tense Frequent shifts in reported speech (imperfect, conditional, compound past)
Clause Structure Mainly independent main clauses Embedded clauses, subordination, concessive structures
Listening Function Preparatory for rebuttal Structurally required for accurate reconstruction
Modal and Evaluative Language Limited use Frequent use of modality and analytical framing
Nature of Critique Immediate and oppositional Delayed, validated, analytically grounded

Because reconstruction must be validated, oversimplification becomes difficult. Learners attend closely to lexical precision, tense concordance, and logical coherence. Moreover, listening acquires structural centrality.

By widening the intellectual genealogy of debate to include Indian philosophical traditions such as those exemplified by Śakarācārya, educators expand the repertoire of epistemic practices available in the classroom. This pluralization does not displace Eurocentric rhetoric, but rather situates it within a broader global history of disciplined reasoning. Applied in contemporary language classrooms, the Purvapaksha-inspired method reframes debate as disciplined inquiry rather than competitive exchange, enriching linguistic development in the process.

Harsh Trivedi
Harsh Trivedi is a Teaching Associate in French at the University of Sheffield, United Kingdom. His scholarship focuses on language teaching pedagogy in French as a Foreign Language, particularly from a decolonial perspective, alongside research on 19th-century French literature.

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