My first thoughts about a Debate Club were that it was for people who already knew how to argue confidently, think quickly and speak without hesitation.
I was wrong.
Debate Club is not a room full of polished speakers trying to outdo each other. It is a space where ideas are tested, shaped, paused, rethought, and sometimes completely changed mid-sentence. That distinction matters more than it sounds. Taking part also builds confidence beyond verbal communication, extending into wider academic study.
Each session begins with a motion that sounds simple on the surface, but rarely stays that way once discussion begins. Participants take on roles across proposition and opposition, while others form an engaged audience, observing, questioning, and stepping in when ready. What becomes clear very quickly is that speaking is only part of it, and the listening and questioning carry just as much weight.
What surprised me most was not the arguments themselves, but the atmosphere between them. There is structure, with timed speaking slots, a chair to keep discussion focused, and a clear code of conduct. Yet there is also space for uncertainty. No one is expected to arrive with perfect answers. In fact, some of the strongest contributions come from people thinking their way through a point in real time. In that sense, the skills developed transfer well into academic work, where clarity and engagement with complexity are just as important as certainty.
Over time, the club begins to shape how we communicate outside the room. We become more comfortable questioning our own assumptions. We start noticing when a claim needs evidence, or when an argument sounds convincing but is not fully supported. These are not just debating skills. They are all-round academic skills.
Perhaps the most important aspect, however, is not skill development at all. It is the fact that we are in a space where disagreement is normalised without becoming hostile. That balance is widely known to be difficult to find online, where opinions often feel as though they must be defended at all costs or not shared at all.
At Debate Club, disagreement is not a performance. It is a process.
And that is why people come back, not necessarily to ‘win’ arguments, but to think more clearly, speak more confidently and listen more carefully in real time with others doing the same.
What we introduced before was what the OU Debate Club is. It creates a space where your voice does not need to be fully formed to be worth hearing.
Your words can shape how others think.
Come and join us: https://www.oudebateclub.com/
