DB8 Speech & Debate Academy
Bills Library

Practice bills

Every bill is sorted by grade band and skill level — pick the row that matches you. Built in, no outside sites required.

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H.R. 361·Elementary Intermediate

A Bill to Cap Elementary Class Size at 22 Students

Rep. Owens (D-WI)

Federal funds tied to capping K-3 class sizes at 22 students, with phased compliance.

Sec. 1 — Mandate

Districts receiving Title I funds shall cap K-3 classes at 22 students per teacher.

Sec. 2 — Exceptions

Districts may exceed the cap by up to 2 students with state approval and an aide present.

Sec. 3 — Funding

$2.3 billion over 5 years for additional teachers.

Sec. 4 — Enforcement

Annual class-size reports to the Department of Education.

Tournament Prep

Mechanical parts, sourced & timed

Use this as your pre-round checklist. Memorize the source citation. Time yourself to the delivery target.

Bill / Number
H.R. 361 — A Bill to Cap Elementary Class Size at 22 Students
Funding source
$2.3B over 5 years for additional teachers.
Timeline
Phased compliance.
Tight — teacher shortages are real, but Tennessee STAR ran a comparable scale.
Enforcing agency
Department of Education (Title I).
Yes — ED already enforces class-size reporting.
Penalty for non-compliance
Title I funding adjustment.
Source citation
Tennessee STAR study, Krueger (1999), Quarterly Journal of Economics — princeton.edu.
Delivery time (read aloud)
1:00 (60s)
Strongest counter-argument

Reducing class size from 25 to 22 is too small a change to matter.

Your pre-emptive answer

Krueger's Project STAR (1999) showed effect sizes appeared even for modest reductions in K-3 — and persisted into adulthood (Chetty 2011, NBER) as higher college attendance.