Article By: Agnes Hina
The University of North Georgia's (ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥) debate team collected a series of accolades in the Pi Kappa Delta National Conference from March 10-12 at the University of Central Florida. Nathalia Ingles earned All-American status, Taylor Mullikin earned a superior rating in broadcast journalism, and the team won superior overall for small entry sweepstakes. This is the fourth time ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ has earned an All-American honor; the last time a Nighthawk brought home the award was 2015.
"I was surprised because I know that there were students that had the potential to win it and I know that I put a lot of work into my involvement at ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥. I believe my involvement definitely helped shape the outcome, and I feel it's deserved," Ingles, the team's treasurer, said.
Ingles' participation on the team has even inspired her to change her major to communication with a concentration in public relations.
My role as adviser is to create opportunities, but it's a student-run program. So, I have to give all the credit and success to them.
Dr. Tom Preston
ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ professor of communication
The Buford, Georgia, native hopes to work on a Master of Business Administration after graduating in May 2023.
The team won 19 individual awards at the Georgia Intercollegiate Forensics Association state championship tournament on Feb. 26, including first place in the pentathlon (overall individual) won by Mullikin, the team president.
The following day the team earned multiple awards at the Georgia Parliamentary Debate Association state championship tournament, including the state title in the sweepstakes competition. It marked the group's first overall state title since 2009. Individual awards from the event included:
"My role as adviser is to create opportunities, but it's a student-run program. So, I have to give all the credit and success to them," Dr. Tom Preston, professor of communication, said. "They don't have to compete, but they do it so well. They've continued to thrive despite any challenges they may face, including the pandemic."
The latest success comes after ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ in 2021 earned the Civic and Community Engagement Award, the highest distinction from Emory University's Center for Community and Civic Engagement (CCE). The award was for ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ debate students undergoing training for judging, and then judging, at middle and high school tournaments. Over 100 students were involved in this service-learning program.
For more on the team and how to join the ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ Speech and Debate Club, visit the ÎçÒ¹¿ì²¥ Connect pages for the and campuses.