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I have been repeatedly asked by parents, coaches, and tutors who have browsed my Beginner's pages many of the questions answered below. Therefore, I provide the information below with the hope that it will reduce the weight of email in my inbox. If you are a parent, coach, or tutor, then please read (or at least scan) the information below before you request further information from me. How can my child/student start to improve their game? Beginners should play (in tournaments, against computers, and with chess club members), record and analyze their games, study tactics, middle game strategies, positional elements, tactics, endings, openings, tactics, grandmaster games, tactics, and attend the tutorials provided by respected players at your local chess club. There is no simple way to learn chess (if there were, there would be more grandmasters). Chess is a game of tactics, strategy, tactics, psychology, and tactics — all aspects must be learned. Tactics are relatively easy to learn by solving tactical exercises like those found here. Tactical ability will help the most in the beginning. After becoming proficient in tactics, beginners should learn the positional elements of chess and their relationships to tactics, pawn structure, and middle-game planning. It is also valuable to learn basic ending play. What age is good to start teaching chess to children? Many top chess players began learning chess before the age of 8. Some as early as 4 years of age. (I began at 33.) If your child shows interest, then teach them the rules of chess. The game of chess has many parallels in life. Seize the opportunity to teach chess and life. Show how adults win graciously, and lose with dignity.
Can you comment on chess skills and their relationship to intelligence and academic ability? I believe that Chess makes kids smart. My experiences show it to be true. Students who learn to play chess show noticeable improvement in grades, standardized test scores, and attention span. Chess play hones spacial and sequential logic skills. Many teachers are finding that chess shows children the rewards of study and practice. Through independent reading and research, students learn principles that they can apply immediately not only to chess but also to real-life problems as well. Mr. John A. Bain reports in his Chess Tactics For Students, "The Spring 1993 Issue of Chess Coach Newsletter noted the educational value of chess instruction in public schools. ... A New York public school study shows chessplaying students gain in reading comprehension skills at a greater rate than non-chessplaying peers." Many parents and teachers have used chess as a tool for teaching critical thinking skills by emphasizing that learning how to solve a problem is more important than the solution. Through chess, students learn how to analyze a situation by focusing on the important factors and discarding the distractions. They learn to devise creative solutions and to put their plans into action. Chess helps to encourage patience, sharp memory, the ability to concentrate, problem-solving skills, and the understanding that certain behaviors carry certain consequences. Chess works well with developing minds because it is self-motivating. It is fun to play. I sincerely believe that chess play improves intelligence and academic performance. One excellent source of scholarly studies about the relationship of chess to academic achievement is USCF." Is there any way to beat the current world chess champion? Yes. What books can you recommend? The Logical Chess Library has a good selection of the best books. If you had to choose one book to help a chess novice, what would it be? Logical Chess Move by Move by Irving Chernev in our Logical Chess Library is an inspiration for this web site. Looks at 33 games, and comments on the thought behind every move. For novices who would like to become intermediate players. Where can I get more information? First, understand that there are more books written on the subject of chess than any other single subject. (Isn't that an amazing statement?!) There are many periodicals and web sources of information. It is easy to become overwhelmed by the amount of quality information and instruction available once you begin looking. All beginning browsers of chess information should start with the USENET chess FAQ. Be guided by this advice. One book well understood is better than 100 on the shelf. Still want more information? Try the History & Trivia of Chess. I am always interested in receiving comments on how these pages can be improved. If you have comments or questions about beginning or improving chess play that have not been answered above, then send me email (click About). |
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