National Right to Life Jane B. Thompson Oratory
Contest
The National
Right to Life Oratory Contest strives to promote the
ability of high school juniors and seniors to share
their pro-life views with others. Although
speaking ability is important, this contest also
seeks to help teens organize and express their
pro-life views. We also strive to give the
contestants an opportunity to meet other pro-life
teens
2007 Contest
Rules
- High
school juniors and seniors in that grade
February 1 of the year of the national contest
are eligible to compete. In case of advanced
students, non-traditional students, or home
schooled students, the school must recognize the
student as a junior or senior or the year the
student will enter college will be used to
determine eligibility.
- Students
who have competed in their junior year may
compete the following year as seniors (with an
entirely new speech) except if the student has
won first place in the national contest. Second
place winners may compete again.
-
Contestants are to research, write, and present
an original pro-life speech on abortion,
infanticide, euthanasia or stem cell research.
The speech should address one of these topics
directly using other topics only as support.
- The
speech is to be 5 – 7 minutes in length. A
contestant will be disqualified if the speech is
timed to be under 4 minutes or over 8 minutes in
length. Judges are instructed to use their
judgment regarding under or over time limit
speeches. It is at the judges’ discretion how
the 4-5 minute and the 7-8 minute speech will
reflect in the score.
-
Appropriate gestures are allowed. Props are not
allowed.
- Speech
content may not be significantly changed as a
contestant advances. Fine-tuning for minor
corrections or to adjust time is allowed and
encouraged. A written copy of the contestant’s
speech must be forwarded to the national
contest.
- The
contestant should use up-to-date factual
information.
- The style
should be appropriate to the message of the
speech. A dramatic presentation is not
acceptable. A dramatic presentation is
considered anything that is read or preformed
that has been previously written by another
author; a short story, a poem, etc. Although
quotes to support a position or statement are
appropriate, they may not dominate the speech,
and should be appropriately citied. Dramatic
presentations are also defined, for the purposes
of this contest, to include acting as a thing or
another person, such as acting out the life of
an unborn baby. This rule is not to be
interpreted to rule out the use of emotion.
- The
judges’ background and qualifications differ,
although all are pro-life, the speech should
appeal to a broad audience.
- No
copyrighted speeches shall be used in the
contest.
- The
contest may be videotaped or recorded. The tape
will remain the property of National Right to
Life.
-
Contestants may use notes.
- The use
of a podium is optional.
- The use
of microphones will not be allowed. The Contest
Director may make an exception if the contest
room creates a necessity for the use of
microphones.
- The
Contest will consist of several rounds. There
will be at least one preliminary round depending
on the number of contestants. For the
preliminary round contestants will be assigned
to rooms with 4-7 contestants to compete. The 2
contestants from each room with the highest
scores will proceed to the next level until
there are 4 contestants in the final round.
- Each room
will have 3 judges and a timekeeper.
- Speaking
order for the preliminary round will be
determined before the contest by drawing. In
following rounds speaking order will be
determined by scores in the previous round.
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