Commissioner hails DebateChamps as boosting critical thinking, communication

The commissioner for basic and secondary education, Jamiu Alli-Balogun, has applauded the maiden Lagos Schools DebateChamps Competition, saying that it showcased knowledge, critical thinking and communication skills.
At the grand finale of the three-day competition, Mr Alli-Balogun said the platform broadened students’ exposure and encouraged intellectual engagement.
He also said it fostered healthy competition and strengthened students’ leadership potential.
Students from 19 junior and senior secondary schools across the six education districts of Lagos participated in the competition organised by DebateChamps and the Harvard Debate Council (U.S.).
The competition was convened by Bukunmi Babatunde and Halimat Usman. Mr Alli-Balogun commended the participants for demonstrating exceptional talents, confidence and analytical abilities.
He said that the competition reflected years of nurturing, mentorship and academic excellence across schools.
“The competition has enriched your academic journey, strengthened your confidence, sharpened your communication skills, and prepared you for leadership. Keep participating, keep speaking; the future belongs to you,” he said.
Wale Olaoye, chaperone to Lagos State Model Senior College, Meiran, described the competition as innovative, saying its impromptu format sharpened students’ creativity and critical thinking.
“The shift from prepared topics to impromptu debates challenged students to think quickly, build spontaneous arguments and develop skills essential for global competitiveness and academic excellence,” Mr Olaoye said.
Mr Olaoye, however, called for greater transparency by publishing the scoring criteria and rubrics. He also advocated stricter enforcement of prohibitions on prohibited materials to sustain fairness, integrity and confidence.
Ms Babatunde said the co-conveners were amazed at how easily the participants adapted to the new debate format. She also said the students’ overall performance was remarkable.
“It is evident that there is indeed potential here,” she said.
According to her, the students were given the debate topics half an hour before the preliminary and the elimination stages.
“The students were confident and enthusiastic. They were exposed to the Junior World Schools debate format with the aim of introducing a system that encourages problem-solving and critical thinking.
“The ability of the students to deliver exceptional speeches on topics they were only presented with 30 minutes before the rounds demonstrates independent thinking and problem-solving skills,” Ms Babatunde said.
The senior category of the competition was won by Wellspring College, Omole, while Maryland Comprehensive Secondary School, Ikeja, emerged the first runner-up.
In the junior category, British International School, Victoria Island, won, while Grace High School, Gbagada, finished as the first runner-up.
The panel of judges identified 20 outstanding speakers, 10 each from the senior and junior categories.
(NAN)
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Africa
Senegal nominates Birame Diop as candidate for ECOWAS Commission president
Senegal has nominated Birame Diop, a retired air force general and the country’s current minister of the armed forces, as its candidate for ECOWAS president.

Education
365 Nigerian students expelled for forging academic credentials to gain admission into MAPOLY
The management of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, has expelled 365 students for securing admission with falsified academic documents.

Economy
Economic cost of tobacco consumption in Nigeria is N211 billion annually: NTCA
The economic burden of tobacco consumption in Nigeria totals roughly N211.2 billion annually, spanning direct healthcare costs and indirect losses from illness and premature death.

States
Court sentences tricyclist to death for murder of passenger in Anambra
Trial judge Justice Lauretta Oyeka, in her judgement, convicted Mr Ezike of the murder of Jude Onwuegbuchunam, an indigene of Umuoji in Anambra.

Anti-Corruption
Doximity chief revenue officer Paul Jorgensen jailed 26 months for insider trading
In addition to the prison sentence, Mr Jorgensen, 53, of Charlotte, North Carolina, was sentenced to two years of supervised release and ordered to pay $2,532,775.52 in forfeiture.

Sport
2026 FIFA World Cup: Ramaphosa rallies support for South Africa’s Bafana Bafana
“For 90 minutes, as they play for our country, we will not be divided by language, race, province, club or circumstance,” Mr Ramaphosa stated.





