News

Truman Forensics takes 3rd at second largest OATS ever!

At a recent online asynchronous tournament (OATS), Truman Speech earned an impressive 3rd Place finish out of 53 teams. According to the tournament hosts, Outspoken Culture, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to providing an equitable, inclusive, and empowering platform for collegiate speech competitions, this tournament was the second largest in all of OATS history. Truman’s team has been steadily collecting qualifications for the National Forensic Association (NFA) national tournament in April, with 7 speech members and 4 debaters qualified across 31 individual slots.

While Truman students begin to prepare for finals, the team plans to round out their semester with three more competitions within the next month to stay polished over the coming breaks.

In addition to the most recent OATS tournament, the team also traveled to two in-person tournaments at the beginning of November. See below and on the team’s Instagram (@Trumanforensicunion) for the results:

OATS #3

Out of 180 students, speech team member Briggs Maynor (’26) finished 2nd Place in Individual Sweepstakes. He received this recognition due to placing 2nd in Poetry and 3rd in Dramatic Interpretation.

Alex Peterson (’26) was also among the top point earners at the tournament, placing 4th in Individual Sweepstakes. She received 2nd in After-Dinner Speaking, 4th in Informative, and 6th in Communication Analysis.

Ashton Mullen (’26) placed 2nd in Extemporaneous Speaking out of 46 competitors.

Finally, freshman and novice team member, Emery McEvoy (’28), was in the top 12 in Impromptu Speaking out of 77 competitors, the largest event at the tournament.

 

Redbird LD Tournament

A group of debaters traveled to Bloomington, IL on November 4-6 for the annual Lincoln-Douglas debate tournament hosted by Illinois State University. Truman walked away with three new qualifications to NFA.

Sophomore Payten Luaders (’27) was a Semifinalist (TOP 4) in the Varsity division and earned 5th Place Varsity Speaker.

Ben Croat (’27) was the 2nd Place tournament runner-up in the Junior Varsity division and was 4th Place JV Speaker.

Freshman Ryan Franklin (’28) was a Semifinalist (TOP 4) in the JV division, losing on a 2-1 decision. Ryan also accumulated enough points to earn 3rd Place JV Speaker.

Sawyer Partney (’28) was the 3rd Place Speaker in the Novice division.

 

Norton IE Tournament

The same weekend the debate team traveled to ISU, members of the speech team went to Peoria, IL for the Norton individual events tournament hosted by Bradley University.

Alex Peterson was 5th in After-Dinner Speaking out of 39 competitors and made it to the Semifinal (TOP 16) round of Impromptu out of 68 participants.

Emery McEvoy was the Tournament Champion in Novice Communication Analysis, in addition to placing 3rd in Novice After-Dinner Speaking and 6th in Novice Impromptu.

Freshman Mikayla Hammer (’28) also placed 4th in Novice Impromptu out of 38 competitors.

 

 

The Truman Forensics Team is housed within the newly merged Department of Communication and Theatre Arts, giving students the opportunity to compete in both speech and debate activities across the state of Missouri and throughout the United States. If you are interested in joining the team or learning more about competitive public speaking or debate, please contact Director of the team, Dr. Ben Davis, at bdavis@truman.edu, or Assistant Director, Professor Scott Koslow, at skoslow@truman.edu.

Truman Forensics starts ’24-’25 competition season strong

The Truman Forensics Team has officially started their 2024-2025 competition season. The team was successful at a few early-season tournaments. As it stands currently, the team has qualified 8 students and 27 slots for nationals across speech and debate combined!

The Truman Forensics Team is housed within the newly merged Department of Communication and Theatre Arts, giving students the opportunity to compete in both speech and debate activities across the state of Missouri and throughout the United States. If you are interested in joining the team or learning more about competitive public speaking or debate, please contact Director of the team, Dr. Ben Davis, at bdavis@truman.edu, or Assistant Director, Professor Scott Koslow, at skoslow@truman.edu.

Check out their recent results below!

 

OATS #1

Initially, the speech team earned 2nd Place at the first online asynchronous tournament series (OATS) competition, Sept. 30-Oct. 4, ranking above many well-known programs like George Mason University and the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. Multiple students earned individual awards and recognition:

  • Briggs Maynor (’26) was 3rd place in Poetry, 4th place in Drama, and 6th place in Prose. Briggs received enough points to earn 4th place in Individual Sweepstakes.
  • Alex Peterson (’26) received 4th place in Impromptu.
  • Bryna Adamson (’27) was 5th in Persuasion.
  • Mikayla Hammer (’28) was 6th and Top Novice in Persuasion and a Semifinalist (top 12) in Impromptu.
  • Emery McEvoy (’28) earned 3rd and Top Novice in Communication Analysis and Top Novice in After-Dinner Speaking.

 

Back to the Nest at Illinois State

On Oct.5-6, speech team members traveled to Illinois State University in Bloomington, IL and competed in-person at the annual “Back to the Nest” tournament. On the first day of the competition, the team placed 3rd overall above teams from Ball State University and the University of Illinois Chicago. Many students received recognition:

  • Briggs Maynor earned 4th in Poetry, 5th inDrama, and 6th in Communication Analysis.
  • Alex Peterson received 3rd in Informative and 4th in After-Dinner Speaking.
  • Ashton Mullen (’26) earned 2nd in Novice Extemp and 3rd in Novice Impromptu.
  • Bryna Adamson was 6th in Persuasion.
  • Mikayla Hammer earned 1st in Novice Extemp, 4th in Novice Impromptu, and 5th and Top Novice in Persuasion.
  • Emery McEvoy was 2nd in Novice Impromptu, 3rd and Top Novice in After-Dinner Speaking, and 5th and Top Novice in Communication Analysis.
  • Jasmin Elwood (’28) was 4th in Novice Extemp.

On day 2 of the ISU tournament…

  • Briggs Maynor earned 5th in Communication Analysis, 5thin Drama, and 6th in Poetry.
  • Alex Peterson was 2nd in Informative, 4th in Impromptu, and 6th in After-Dinner Speaking.
  • Ashton Mullen earned Top Novice in both Extemp and Impromptu.
  • Mikayla Hammer was Top Novice in Persuasion.
  • Emery McEvoy was Top Novice in both After-Dinner Speaking and Communication Analysis.

Missouri Mule/Dale Carnegie Swing

The full team then travelled to the University of Central Missouri on Oct. 4-6 for the Missouri Mule/Dale Carnegie Swing tournament. Overall, the team placed 2nd at the Mule part of the competition, ranking above programs from Southwest Baptist University and Texas State. At the Dale Carnegie portion, the team placed 2nd in Debate Sweepstakes, 2nd in Speech Sweepstakes, and 2nd Overall. Across the entire weekend and both parts of the tournament, the team earned 2nd Place.

 

In After-Dinner Speaking…

Emery McEvoy placed 2nd at the Mule at 1st at the Carnegie.

In Communication Analysis…

Emery McEvoy placed 2nd at both the Mule and the Carnegie.

In Extemporaneous Speaking…

Mikayla Hammer earned 1st Place and Ashton Mullen received 5th at the Mule.

In Impromptu Speaking…

Mikayla Hammer was 1st and Emery McEvoy was 6th at the Mule. At the Carnegie, Emery was 5th and Cooper Spacil (’28) placed 7th.

In Informative Speaking…

Rashed Sohan (’26) earned 5th Place at both the Mule and the Carnegie.

In Persuasive Speaking…

Mikayla Hamer earned 1st Place, Ashton Mullen received 2nd, and Sawyer Partney (’28) was 6th at the Mule. Ashton then earned 3rd Place at the Carnegie.

In Program Oral Interpretation…

Lauren Weiss (’28) placed 5th at the Carnegie portion of the tournament.

In Prose…

Jasmin Elwood received 2nd at the Mule. At the Carnegie, Jasmin placed 4th and Lauren Weiss placed 2nd.

In Novice IPDA at the Mule…

Adli Jacobs (’27) made it to the Semifinal round (TOP 4) and was undefeated coming out of preliminary rounds (6-0), Ashton Mullen was a Quarterfinalist (TOP 8) with a 4-2 prelim record, and Sawyer Partney was an Octafinalist (TOP 16) with a 5-1 record. Ashton was awarded 4th Place Speaker and Adli was 7th Speaker.

In Junior Varsity IPDA…

Ben Croat (’27) and Cooper Spacil made it to the Octafinal round (TOP 16). Cooper was also recognized as the 15th Speaker.

In Varsity IPDA…

Payten Luaders (’27) made it to the Quarterfinal round (TOP 8) and was 3rd Place Speaker. Aiden Breesawitz (’26) earned 9th Place Speaker.

In Novice Lincoln-Douglas (LD) Debate…

Adli Jacobs was a Semifinalist (TOP 4) and placed as 3rd Speaker.

In Junior Varsity LD…

At the Mule, Ryan Franklin (’28) was 6th Place Speaker.

At the Carnegie portion, Ben Croat was 1st Place Speaker, Mikayla Hammer was 5th Speaker, and Ryan Franklin was 6th Speaker.

As one of the top point earners at the tournament who competed in both speech and debate, Ashton Mullen received 5th Place in “The Jack” category.

 

OATS #2

Most recently, the speech team competed against 49 schools at the second OATS (Online Asynchronous Tournament Series) tournament of the season. Truman Forensics came out on top at 1st Place. Truman earned a higher amount of points than many programs often ranked among the top ten teams in the nation, such as the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Wayne State University.

The following students earned individual recognition at the OATS tournament:

Alex Peterson was Tournament Champion and 1st Place in Impromptu Speaking, in addition to earning 2nd Place in After-Dinner Speaking and Prose. Earning the most points individually out of all 180 students competing at the tournament, Alex also received 1st Place in Individual Sweepstakes.

Briggs Maynor placed 2nd in Communication Analysis.

Ben Grandstaff (’27) earned 5th Place in Extemporaneous Speaking.

Mikayla Hammer placed 2nd in Extemporaneous Speaking and 5th in Impromptu Speaking.

Jack Schroeder (’28) earned 6th Place in Extemporaneous Speaking.

Emery McEvoy was 4th overall and the Top Novice competitor in both Impromptu Speaking and Communication Analysis, in addition to winning Tournament Champion and 1st Place in After-Dinner Speaking (ADS). In fact, Emery received the highest ranks above other competitors in his preliminary rounds for ADS and the judging panel for the ADS final round unanimously voted Emery top of the round. Emery conquered the tournament with an impressive 4th Place finish in Individual Sweepstakes.

– – –

The team travels to approximately twenty tournaments throughout the entire competition season, which starts in October and ends with a week-long national tournament April.

Continue to check back here with news on the team’s progress throughout the year. You can also check out the team’s Instagram @Trumanforensicunion or at Truman Forensics on Facebook.

FALL 2023 UPDATES

Truman’s Speech and Debate Team started their season and got a running head start! Students attended virtual tournaments at Illinois State University, Washburn University, and Western Kentucky University. They earned new qualifications to the National Tournament.
In late September, members of the speech team participated in Illinois State University’s 3rd annual online asynchronous Pop-Up Individual Events (IE) Tournament. Senior Megan Ford competed in Prose Interpretation and received 4th place. Sophomores Briggs Maynor and Alexis Peterson competed as well. Briggs received 2nd place in Dramatic Interpretation. Alexis received 3rd place in Impromptu Speaking, qualifying for the National Forensic Association (NFA) at the end of the year. Freshman Jesse Fields also competed in Impromptu at this tournament. The team took home 1st place in IE Sweepstakes.
In early October, at Washburn, Freshmen Payten Lauders and Jesse Fields finished with positive records. Paytenwas 2nd place runner-
up and finished as 6th place speaker. Jesse finished as a Quarterfinalist (Top 8) and 8th-place speaker.
At Western Kentucky, the debate team had much success. Payten finished as a Semifinalist and 1st place speaker in the Junior Varsity division, and Jesse finished as 2nd place runner-up. Seniors Elijah Baum and Alicia Stout advanced to elimination brackets in the Open division, earning their qualifications to NFA. Elijah was a Quarterfinalist (Top 8). Alicia was a Semifinalist (Top 4) and finished as 8th place speaker. Eli Bartz (senior) and Aiden Bressawitz (sophomore) also attended.

In late September, speech team members competed in OATS. Senior Megan Ford competed in Communication Analysis and received 7th place. Sophomore Alexis Peterson also competed in CA and received 3rd place. Not only did Alexis place in the top three in Communication Analysis, but she was also the tournament champion in After Dinner Speaking. Sophomore Briggs Maynor competed in both Informative Speaking and Poetry Interpretation. Briggs received 3rd place in Poetry and 4th place in Informative Speaking. Freshman Bryna Norman also had a good showing for her first tournament as she received 5th place in Program Oral Interpretation. In Individual Sweepstakes, Alex placed 4th, and Briggs placed 5th. In the Overall Sweepstakes, Truman State received 4th place. New qualifications to the National Forensic Association (NFA) include Briggs in Informative Speaking and Poetry, Alexis in Communication Analysis, and Bryna in Program Oral Interp. Great showing, indeed!

The first weekend of October, the entire forensics team attended the Missouri Mule hosted by the University of Central Missouri and dominated the tournament. Some of the funniest people around competed in After Dinner Speaking. Alexis Peterson took 3rd place, and Bryna Norman took 5th place. In Communication Analysis, Megan Ford received 3rd place, and Alexis Peterson was the tournament champion. Let’s take a more dramatic turn to Dramatic Interpretation. Briggs Maynor received 6th place, and sophomore Jes

sie Philips received 3rd place. You can tell these seniors make a good duo because Jillian Humke and Ella Schnake were the tournament champions in Duo Interpretation. Impromptu Speaking

had the most entries, so these competitors had to think on their feet. Jillian finished as a semifinalist (Top 12), Alexis finished in 3rd place, and Ella was the tournament champion. In Informative Speaking, Briggs received 5th place, and Megan received 3rd place. Megan also competed in Persuasive Speaking and received 6th place. In Program Oral Interpretation, Bryna received 2nd place, and Jessie received 4th place. Finally, these storytellers took the cake in their final round. In Prose Interpretation, Briggs received 6th place, Alexis received 3rd place, Ella received 2nd place, and Megan was the tournament champion.

Our debaters also had a great showing! Every debater that attended advanced to elimination brackets. In combined Junior Varsity and Varsity Lincoln-Douglas Debate, freshmen Jesse Fields and Payten Luaders finished in Octafinals (Top 16), and sophomore Aiden Bressawitz and senior Elijah Baum finished in Quarterfinals (Top 8). Senior Eli Bartz finished as a Semifinalist (Top 4) and 3rd speaker. Senior Alicia Stout was the tournament champion in Lincoln-Douglas and was 4th speaker. In the novice Lincoln-Douglas, freshman Ben Croat finished as a Semifinalist and 6th speaker, and freshman Frankie Schuman was the tournament runner-up and 2nd speaker.

In both Individual Events and Overall Sweepstakes, Truman State placed 2nd place, besting reputable Missouri teams, such as Missouri State, the University of Central Missouri, and Southwest Baptist University.

Debaters had another great weekend of debating after the Missouri Mule. They competed virtually at the UNT DeMouget Debate Tournament. In the open division, Elijah Baum finished as an Octafinalist (Top 16) and 7th speaker, Alicia finished as a Quarterfinalist (Top 8) and 6th speaker, and Eli Bartz finished as a Semifinalist (Top 4). In the novice division, Ben Croat was placed as 7th speaker, and Frankie Schuman finished as a Semifinalist (Top 4) and 3rd speaker. Go dawgs!

Wrapping up the fall semester, both the Speech and Debate Teamshad a busy weekend of competition during the first weekend of November. The Speech team traveled to Peoria, Illinois, to compete in person at Bradley University’s 76th L.E. Norton Tournament, while the Debate team participated virtually at Illinois State’s Redbird Debate Tournament.

At the ISU Debate Tournament, senior students Alicia Stout and Elijah Baum performed exceptionally, advancing to the elimination rounds and finishing as Octo-finalists (Top 16). Both seniors earned recognition as Baum finished as the 5th speaker, and Stout finished as 2nd speaker. Other teammates in attendance included senior Eli Bartz, sophomore Aidan Bressawitz, and freshmen Peyton Luaders, Frankie Schuman, and Ben Croat.

Meanwhile, at the Norton Speech Tournament, two of our competitors

advanced to the semifinals: Ella Schnake (senior) in Prose and Alexis

 Peterson (sophomore) in Impromptu Speaking. Schnake also se

cured the position of tournament runner-up in Dramatic

Interpretation, earning her qualification for the National Forensics

Tournament (NFA) in DI. Other teammates in attendance included senior students Megan Ford and Jillian Humke, as well as sophomores Briggs Maynor and Jessie Philips.

 

Any alumni interested in judging or students interested in joining the Forensics Union should contact Director of Forensics Ben Davis at bdavis@truman.edu.

Forensics Team Competes at Virtual Tournaments

Students from Truman’s debate team attended virtual tournaments at Western Kentucky University and Washburn University and earned new qualifications to nationals.

At Washburn, freshman Aiden Breesawitz and sophomore Eli Bartz finished with positive records. Breesawitz finished as a quarterfinalist and earned his NFA qualification.

At Western Kentucky, juniors Alicia Stout and Elijah Baum were invited to the Alexis Elliott Memorial Round Robin, an exclusive competition where only 10 debaters in the nation were able to participate. Stout finished as third place speaker. Breesawitz and Baum were also invited to the Rising Stars Round Robin, which is intended for debaters going into their second year of debate. Truman continued its success at the WKU Debate the following days. Stout was a quarterfinalist and sixth speaker. Baum finished as 10th place speaker.

Students interested in learning more about the Forensics Union at Truman can contact Ben Davis, director of forensics, at bdavis@truman.edu.
Two students at Western Kentucky
Four students at Washburn Warmup

Truman Wins Two National Championships, Other Honors at PKD Nats!

Six students from Truman’s Forensics Union competed at the Pi Kappa Delta Biennial National Tournament & Convention in Orlando, Florida. This tournament hosted 69 schools across the nation with more than 1,000 entries. Top superior awards were given to the top three competitors. Superior awards were given to the top 10% in a field, and excellence awards were awarded to the next top 20%. In addition, three of the team members were selected to showcase their events in front of the convention.

Individual placements are as follows:

  • Senior Jackson Elder placed third in persuasion where he was awarded top superior. He earned superior distinction in extemporaneous speaking and was selected to perform in the limited prep showcase. Elder acquired excellence in impromptu speaking, broadcast journalism and interviewing.
  • Senior Kayla Gerlt was awarded excellence in after dinner speaking, duo interpretation, extemporaneous speaking and prose.
  • Sophomore Jillian Humke was awarded superior in after dinner speaking and was selected to perform in the after dinner speaking/communication analysis showcase.
  • Sophomore Ella Schnake was the national champion in interviewing and impromptu speaking. She was selected to perform her impromptu in the showcase of champions. Schnake was awarded superior in dramatic interpretation and prose, and excellence in program oral interpretation and duo interpretation.
  • Sophomore Alicia Stout was a quarterfinalist in Lincoln-Douglas Debate and IPDA Debate

Team placements are as follows:

  • Individual Sweepstakes – Excellence (8th out of 61 schools)
  • Debate Sweepstakes – Good (24th out of 63 schools)
  • Overall Sweepstakes – Good (24th place out of 69 schools)