Chess for Kids Today

Chess for Children: Basic Principles of the Game

November 17th, 2008, by Mona Gaughan

One important aspect of a Chess for Children instructional program is to introduce a few basic principles of the game as soon as the kids learn to move the pieces. When they start playing chess, many kids move the pieces randomly about the board without any idea about tactics or strategy. Teaching a few basic principles now will get them to think about why they are moving a particular piece. It will improve their chess game immediately and make it easier to teach openings later on.

Here are a few simple principles of the game that most experts agree are vital for children to understand:

1. Try not to move the same chess piece twice at the beginning of the game. This is a common beginner’s mistake which often allows one’s opponent to develop his pieces quickly while the beginner wastes time moving one piece over and over. It’s also dangerous because most of the time you cannot mount an effective attack with just a piece or two.
2. Try to control the center of the board. This means bringing out the center pawns and your knights as quickly as possible. You should try to move pieces that attack the four squares that make up the center of the board.
3. Develop your major pieces quickly. Bring your knights and bishops out early in the game after you move your center pawns out. Get them ready to mount an attack together.
4. Try to leave a pawn or two in the center. This will help hold the center and harass your opponent’s more powerful pieces.
5. Do not bring the Queen out too early. You will see kids constantly bringing out the Queen on the second or third move of the game. This is rarely productive and sometimes it can be disastrous. Your opponent will be able to chase the Queen around the board with lesser pieces. The result is that your opponent will have developed his pieces while your Queen is in constant retreat. Not very productive, is it?
6. Castle as soon as possible. Castling early gets your King to safety. You usually want to do this to the King’s side and get the King behind the protection of his three pawns.
7. Avoid premature attacks: This is another beginner’s pitfall. Launching an attack before sufficient force is gathered for the attack usually is not effective and can leave yourself open to counterattack.

Following these few general chess principles will help the beginning chess player make sense of the crowded board. Sometimes all the options and just the number of different pieces can be a little overwhelming for a child.

If you feel that your child is confused and frustrated by the complexity of the game, you might want to reduce the number of pieces and play a simplified game. The same principles can be followed with the reduced number of pieces and instead of tuning the game out, the child might be able to understand it better and probably will want to learn more. You can always add pieces as the young player gets more and more accustomed to the game.

Keep it simple and keep it fun!

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Chess for Children - Introducing the Game

October 10th, 2008, by Mona Gaughan

Chess is very complex and if you introduce a child to the game in the wrong way, it quickly can become tedious and boring for him. If that happens, he will tune you out and you may have lost a future Grandmaster of the game.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Chess can be fun, almost addicting! There are specially designed programs for teaching chess to young players. These “Chess for Children” programs not only keep the process painless and entertaining but also serve to spark and maintain our kids’ interest. Chess is a game that a child may play for the rest of his life. Our job is to introduce chess to children in such a way as to ensure that happens.

That’s sounds reasonable, doesn’t it? Okay, but what’s the right way? Let’s take a look at these ideas and see if anything rings true.

1. Present the game in a step-by-step process, making sure the child masters each step before proceeding to the next.

2. Make the lessons short. Don’t overload your student. Don’t teach all the moves for all the pieces in one lesson. Unless your child is another Bobby Fischer, the amount of new material he is able to absorb will be limited.

3. Spend more time practicing lessons you’ve already covered than teaching new material.

4. Use the internet whenever possible. Children will learn faster using an interactive Chess for Kids learning program than any other way. It’s entertaining and fun but it gets the message across and then reinforces it with quizzes and games.

5. Make use of an electronic chess computer for practice games. This will increase markedly your child’s interest in the game.

6. If you are giving a lesson, be prepared. Your child must believe that you know what you’re talking about.

7. Give your child positive reinforcement whenever possible. For a particularly outstanding chess performance, reward the child materially with his favorite dessert or a visit to the movie theater.

8. Present new chess material only when you child is well-rested and fresh.

9. Be patient. Don’t expect too much too fast.

10. Keep it fun! If either of you is not enjoying the lesson or practice session, cut it short.

One often overlooked aspect of playing chess games with children is keeping a record of moves and replaying and analyzing games afterwards. This gives you the chance to look at each position with hindsight. If a particular move led to losing a piece, look at some of the alternative moves. Play the game out to see if a different move would have changed the outcome. Keeping track of your moves provides endless opportunities for learning….for both you and your child.

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Chess for Parents

September 17th, 2008, by Mona Gaughan

Talking about “Chess for Children” before we talk about “Chess For Parents” might be like putting the cart before the horse. First things first! Whether your children are playing chess at school, in a chess club for kids or just after school with their buddies, you will be talking about chess with them. You need to understand what they’re talking about. Hopefully, you will be playing a game or two with them as well. If you don’t know how to play chess, you should remedy the situation immediately if not sooner.

It won’t be long until your kids are beating you in chess, but let’s delay that inevitable outcome as long as we can. Most parents whose children want to play chess have little or no experience. Even the parents of Sergey Korjakin from Ukraine, the youngest Grandmaster in the world, did not play chess when their son began his incredible ascent to the elite ranks of world chess players.

There are many reasons why parents should learn to play chess if their kids are participating in a “Chess for Children” program. Learning to play chess will:

1. Bring the family closer together by having a common interest.
2. Allow you to speak with your child with knowledge about a subject he loves.
3. Provide opportunities to spend quality time with your child practicing and studying the game.
4. Make your child look forward to coming home and spending time with you.
5. Earn your child’s respect, if not for your chess ability, then for your desire to learn the game.
6. Enable you to follow your child’s progress and understand the challenges he or she faces.

Let’s say you are a parent who has decided to study chess for any or all of the reasons above. How can you begin? Here are just a few ideas:

1. If you haven’t already, buy a chess board and pieces and set them up in a prominent place in the house.
2. Find out what materials your child is using and study them.
3. Augment his program with a good beginner book of your own or on-line, interactive chess course.
4. Once you have the basics, buy a good chess computer game .(The Phantom Force Electronic Chess game would be an excellent choice.)
5. Get experience playing games both on your electronic chess game and on-line.
6. Play your child as much as you can.
7. Keep a record of your games and analyze them together.

The idea isn’t to learn to beat your child in a game of chess. The idea is to bring your family closer together, to learn and grow together. Chess provides the perfect medium to accomplish just that. Just as chess will teach your child to think critically, to analyze a situation and weigh choices before making a decision, it will do the same for you. Who said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks?

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