World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection
by Indian Schools Debating Society (ISDS)
Represent India at WSDC
World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection is a competition by Indian Schools Debating Society (ISDS) for students in Class 8–11, open to students across India.
Mode
Hybrid
Eligibility
Class 8–11
Fee
₹1,000
Duration
5 months
Format
Both · Teams of 4
Time needed
Regional selection rounds are one-day online events. The National Selection Camp is a 5-6 day in-person event. Selected students are expected to commit significantly to rigorous training for several months leading up to the World Schools Debating Championship.
About This Opportunity
The World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection is the official national selection process conducted by the Indian Schools Debating Society (ISDS) to identify and prepare five students to represent India at the annual World Schools Debating Championship. With over 60 national teams competing annually, the WSDC is widely regarded as the world's most prestigious interschool debating competition.
The selection process spans five months and comprises three stages. Regional online rounds held from August to October allow students across India to compete in the World Schools format through a virtual platform, making participation accessible regardless of geography. Intermediate rounds narrow the field to the strongest candidates before the National Selection Camp, held in Chennai from December 26-30, where finalists compete in intensive in-person rounds under observation of the ISDS selection committee.
Students may participate as part of a school team of three to four members, or through the individual open access track available to students whose schools lack ISDS affiliation. Students in grades 8 to 11 are eligible; grade 12 students are not eligible as the WSDC competition cycle extends beyond the school term.
The five selected students are supported by ISDS for the WSDC 2026, to be hosted in Kenya. The ISDS National Selections for Team India is distinct from the Indian Schools Debating Championships (ISDC), which is a separate ISDS competition.
Eligibility
- Grade Level
- Class 8–11
- Age Range
- 12 - 18 years
- Location
- Nationwide
Additional requirements
- Grade 12 students are not eligible for the WSDC Team India Selection cycle.
Open to Indian students in grades 8-11. Grade 12 students are not eligible. Students may participate as part of a school team or through the individual open access track.
Does your child qualify?
WiWit checks eligibility against your child's class, age, and location, and finds more opportunities like this one.
Academic Details
Difficulty: Advanced
Rewards & Recognition
Recognition
Represent India at WSDC 2026 in Kenya
Skills your child builds
Highlights
- Official ISDS selection process for Team India
- Five students selected to represent India internationally at WSDC
- Combines accessible online regional rounds with in-person national camp in Chennai
Rounds & format
Stage 1: Regional online rounds (August-October) in World Schools format. Stage 2: Intermediate rounds to shortlist finalists. Stage 3: National Selection Camp (Chennai, December 26-30) — intensive in-person rounds.
How entries are judged
Competitors are assessed on matter (argument quality and relevance), manner (delivery, style, and engagement), and method (structure, rebuttal, and logical consistency) in World Schools format.
Selection process
Five students are selected from the National Camp to form Team India for WSDC 2026. Selection is based on cumulative performance across all stages.
How to apply
- 1Online registration for Regional Selection Rounds (Team-based or Individual track)
- 2Participation in Regional Selection Rounds (online)
- 3Participation in Intermediate Selection Round (may involve quizzes, essays, and additional debates)
- 4Invitation and participation in National Selection Camp (in-person)
Fees & financial support
Fee details
Registration fee of Rs. 1,000 per participant covers all online regional rounds.
Frequently asked questions
Is World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection free?
₹1,000 registration
Who can participate in World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection?
Students in Class 8–11. children aged 12-18.
What will my child gain from World Schools Debating Championship (WSDC) Team India Selection?
Represent India at WSDC . Training and preparation support for selected students. Compete in the world's most prestigious interschool debating competition.
How we verified this
WiWit checks every listing before publishing it. The details above were last checked against official sources on .
Official sources
Share with other parents
Is this the right fit for your child?
WiWit matches opportunities to your child's class, interests, and skills, not a generic list. Save this and get reminders before the deadline closes.
Categories
WiWit
Don't miss what your child actually qualifies for
There are hundreds more opportunities like this one. WiWit matches them to your child's class, interests, and skills, so you find the right ones without searching through everything.
- Matched to your child's class, age, and interests
- Deadline reminders so you never miss registration
- Every opportunity verified before it's listed
Related Opportunities
Ahmedabad Grand Challenges Programme
by Ahmedabad University
An eight-day residential program at Ahmedabad University for students in Classes 10-12. Participants address real-world challenges in sustainability, public health, and urban systems.
What your child could gain:
CHEMUN — Chennai Model United Nations
by American International School Chennai
THIMUN-affiliated Model United Nations conference at American International School of Chennai for high school students, spanning 13 committees and 39 debate topics over three days.
What your child could gain:
Best Delegate Model UN Conference
by BestDelegate
Best Delegate Model UN Conference offers Indian students a dynamic platform to enhance skills in diplomacy, debate, leadership, and global issue resolution through simulating UN committees.
What your child could gain:
