National final countdown: QE’s debaters look forward to their big day

A Year 13 team will be battling it out with some of the best school debaters in the country tomorrow at the grand final of the historic Mace competition.
The five students reached the final of the debating competition run by the English-Speaking Union after last month triumphing in the Greater London regional finals.
Headmaster Neil Enright said: “Our five sixth-formers have done extremely well to have reached the final of the competition: I wish them the best of luck! The ability to speak well is an essential skill for young people aspiring to thrive in high-level careers, which is why we have invested heavily here in creating The Robert Dudley Studio – our new venue for oracy and drama.
“Furthermore, debating is invaluable as a way of training young people in oracy. Through it, they learn to: put together arguments; express those arguments clearly and convincingly; and then think on their feet so that they can respond when those arguments are challenged.”
Following their triumph at the regional event hosted by Lady Eleanor Holles School, the five young Elizabethans – Chanakya Seetharam, Saim Khan, Zaki Mustafa, Koustuv Bhowmick and Rohan Kumar – will travel to the ESU’s historic home, Dartmouth House in London’s Mayfair, for the grand final on 30th April.
Founded in 1957, the ESU Schools’ Mace is this country’s oldest and largest debating competition for schools.
Open to pupils aged 11-18, it begins every year with heats in November, with around 300 schools participating, each fielding one team.
There are second-round heats in January and regional finals in March, before the national final, held annually in late April.
In the competition, participants are challenged to engage with wide-ranging cross-curricular topics, including controversial subjects and those relating to current affairs.
The grand final is a high-profile occasion, normally featuring high-ranking MPs, leaders of industry and other prominent figures.
English teacher and Enrichment tutor Lev Crofts wrote: “They’ve now won three rounds of this prestigious competition – fending off teams including St Paul’s, Merchant Taylors’ and South Hampstead High School – and they did an incredible job in the regional finals. They seem to be very much enjoying their title as Greater London Champions!”