A good middle-school debate topic is a simple, open question drawn from everyday school and society — for example "Should smartphones be banned in schools?" or "Should homework be abolished?" — phrased so a student can clearly agree or disagree. Match the difficulty to the age: concrete questions suit middle-school debaters, while abstract ethics and complex policy suit older ones. To debate one well, pick a question, map the strongest arguments for and against with a reason or example each, and let the class rate them so consensus is measured rather than assumed. Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument tree instead of a comment thread.
20 concrete, classroom-appropriate questions for younger debaters — from smartphones in schools to single-use plastics. Pick one, map the pros and cons, and let the class weigh in.
The best debate topics for middle-school students are concrete and close to their own lives. Questions about school rules, technology, sport, and the environment give younger debaters something they can research and argue without needing specialist knowledge — and each has honest arguments on both sides.
New to running debates? See our guides to academic debate and structured debate.
Looking for a different level? Browse debate topics for high school and debate topics for college students, or return to the full debate topics library.
Good middle-school debate topics are concrete, relevant to daily life, and have honest arguments on both sides — for example "Should smartphones be banned in schools?", "Should homework be abolished?", or "Should single-use plastics be banned?". At this level the best questions come from school and society rather than abstract ethics or complex policy, so students can find evidence and defend a position without needing specialist knowledge. Every topic on this page is classroom-appropriate and tagged for middle-school level.
Pick a question your students actually care about and already know something about, then check that both sides can be defended — if one answer is obviously right, it will not make a real debate. Keep the wording simple and force a yes/no position ("Should…?") rather than inviting a description. Avoid needlessly distressing subjects, and favour everyday school-and-society questions over abstract or graphic ones. This page filters the library to exactly the questions that suit that level.
This page lists 20 middle-school-appropriate debate questions, grouped by subject — technology, society, education, the environment, health, and more. Each one is a genuinely open question with credible arguments on both sides, chosen so younger debaters can research and defend a position. Pick any question and click "Debate this" to open it as a structured argument map.
Start from the question, then map the reasoning instead of just trading opinions. Collect the strongest arguments for and against, attach a reason or example to each, and let the class weigh in so everyone can see where support actually lands. Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument map: each side adds points, others respond, and the group rates them — which keeps a middle-school debate fair and easy to follow.
You can open any topic in the free Argumentree community, where a debate becomes a structured argument tree instead of a comment thread. Choose a question below and click "Debate this" to start it in the forum, or map the pros and cons first. It works well for classrooms and debate clubs that want students to reason through a question together and keep a record of how they reached an answer.
Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument map, so your class reasons through the question and can see where consensus lands. Free to start.
Start Free