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No. 1 debater in forensic league uses speed-reading skills to win

March 14, 2008|By Janene Holzberg

Brady Daniller can speed read -- or spread, as it is called in debate jargon -- with the best of them.

The Wilde Lake High School sophomore said he capitalizes on his ability to talk fast to cram all of his ideas into six minutes of allotted speaking time.

But one of the judges at Saturday's debate competition at Loyola Blakefield in Towson said there is often an accompanying strategy behind that technique.

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"Spreading allows you to run your arguments rapidly past your opponent, so he or she has a difficult time absorbing them all," said Teresa Needer, a math teacher at Towson High.

"It's pretty common," she said. "But not everyone can get the message across as well as he did when they are reading that fast."

Needer, who awarded the 15-year-old the victory, is not the first judge to make that observation.

Daniller is the top-ranked debater in the Baltimore Catholic Forensic League, which encompasses 40 private and public high schools from counties around the metropolitan area. He won all nine rounds of his first three contests of the season to quickly capture that honor.

At tomorrow's speech and debate state finals at Calvert Hall College High School in Towson, he will compete for a spot at the national championship in May in Wisconsin.

"This is our version of March Madness," joked Daniller, comparing the debate meets to this month's collegiate basketball tournament. "We're figuring out who will be in the nationals."

Kelli Midgely-Biggs, an English and speech teacher whom the kids call "Ms. M-B," is coaching Wilde Lake. The top six from a field of 16 who have qualified in one-on-one debate will move to the highest level, and she has high hopes that Daniller will be one of them.

"He is a very nice young man, yet he drops that demeanor when he's debating," she said. "He is ruthlessly logical, and he goes on the attack. He has done very well with this strategy."

She said she knew to expect great things from her young protege after teaching his older siblings, Andrew and Jamie Daniller, about a decade ago. The three are the children of Gene and Sheri Daniller of Clary's Forest.

But the youngest Daniller didn't get off on the right foot in his second year with the team, losing five consecutive rounds in a preseason regional tournament in September.

"I had no clue what I was doing, and it was pretty scary," he said. "But after that, I picked it right up."

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