Types of Rebuttals
Debate Terminology
Argument Structure
Fallacies & Flaws
100

What does it mean to “reject the premise” in a rebuttal?

You challenge the underlying assumption of the argument; you argue that the basis of their claim is incorrect.

100

What is a “motion”?

The statement being debated, the topic.

100

Three parts of a strong argument?

Claim, Reason, Impact (or Point, Evidence, Explanation).

100

What is a logical fallacy?

A flaw or error in reasoning that weakens an argument.

200

What rebuttal type argues that A does not lead to B?

Rejecting the logic/mechanism.

200

What is the role of the opposition?

To disagree with the motion and provide arguments explaining why it should not stand.

200

Purpose of evidence?

To support your reason with facts, examples, or data.

200

Fallacy: “one event leads to huge consequences”?

Slippery slope fallacy.

300

How do you reject the impact of an argument?

Argue that the effect is smaller, less important, unlikely, or irrelevant compared to what the speaker claims.

300

What’s wrong with attacking the speaker instead of the argument?

It’s an ad hominem fallacy.

400

What is a weighing comparison in rebuttal?

A method for showing why your impact matters more

400

Identify flaw: “You’re wrong because you’ve never been a teacher.”

Appeal to authority / ad hominem / lack of relevance.

500

Example of a logic/mechanism rejection.

“Phones cause lower grades because students are always distracted.”

Propose a rebuttal 

Example answer:
Just having a phone does not cause lower grades—distraction depends on school policy, teacher control, and student self-management.

500

Example of a false cause fallacy.

“Crime dropped after we changed the school uniform policy; therefore uniforms caused the drop.”

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