Alabama Forensic Council wins two national championships

Members of the Alabama Forensic Council at the University of Alabama figured out how best to make the Pi Kappa Delta National Comprehensive Tournament's new virtual format work for them, and came away with two national championships. (contributed)
The Alabama Forensic Council, the University of Alabama’s competitive speech team, won two national championships in speech and debate recently during the virtual Pi Kappa Delta National Comprehensive Tournament.
The AFC won both the Team National Championship for individual events in speech and the Overall Team National Championship, which included elements of both speech and debate.
UA College of Communication and Information Sciences students Cassidy Duncan of Montgomery, Cortland Stone of Columbiana, Ohio, and Elizabeth Tagg of Lindale, Texas, won first place in the Informative Speaking, Dramatic Interpretation and Prose categories, respectively. Stone and Tagg also received first place in the Duo Interpretation category.
Students were tasked with completing their events online this year. Benjamin Pyle, director of AFC, said the students adapted to the new competition style with ease.
“Our students dove headfirst into figuring out how best to make this new competition format work for them to win the national tournaments,” Pyle said. “The team championship at the Pi Kappa Delta National Comprehensive Tournament was the first of our three main competitive goals this season. Words cannot contain the amount of pride I hold in my heart for each of my students, graduate assistant coaches, volunteers, alumni and fellow administrators who have fought hard to reach this achievement.”
The AFC is the oldest cocurricular organization on campus and aims to respect and build upon the successes of alumni and forge a path for current and future students, Pyle said. AFC provides students with skills and resources to engage in intellectual discovery, enable professional development, strengthen and use their unique voices, construct compelling messages, engage in interpersonal and rhetorical exploration, and foster community through advocacy and argumentation.
Read about other recent nonathletic championships won by the University of Alabama here.
This story originally appeared on the University of Alabama’s website.