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The goal: A nation of chess players - and thinkers

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  • The goal: A nation of chess players - and thinkers

    Philadelphia Inquirer
    Oct 2 2011


    The goal: A nation of chess players - and thinkers

    By Tirdad Derakhshani
    Inquirer Staff Writer

    The Republic of Armenia may not be a superpower, but it has much to
    teach America when it comes to education.

    The former Soviet republic last month made chess a mandatory school
    subject for children over 6, citing the benefits of chess in fostering
    strategic thinking.

    It's a great gambit by a nation angling to become a superpower in the
    chess world.

    But it's so much more than that, says chess grandmaster Garry
    Kasparov, who lobbied for Armenia's new law as part of a years-long
    campaign to have governments and school officials around the world
    adopt chess as part of the primary-school curriculum.

    Kasparov says he's working on a similar initiative in the Republic of
    Georgia. And he continues to lobby American lawmakers and local school
    boards through the Kasparov Chess Foundation, which he established in
    2002. The foundation, based in Montville, N.J., has developed a chess
    study guide, which more than 3,000 schools across the country have
    adopted.

    Kasparov, 48, believes chess can fundamentally alter and improve
    student performance in every area, including reading and writing,
    math, even art.

    "Chess is simple enough to learn quickly, complex enough to reward
    concentration, and uses a very broad skill set - creativity,
    calculation, visualization, research," Kasparov says by e-mail from
    his home in Moscow. "There are now ample studies showing across the
    board improvement in classrooms where chess is taught."

    Kasparov says educators have become so obsessed with assessing student
    performance in specific subjects, they don't often appreciate the
    importance of preparing children to learn.

    Chess, he says, is the ultimate way to lay the groundwork. "Again,
    this is because more than preparing for any specific subject, chess
    encourages focus and determination, qualities that reward the budding
    artist as much as the future scientist," he explains.

    University of Pennsylvania educator Frances O'Connell Rust concurs.
    Rust, director of the teacher education program at the Graduate School
    of Education, spent several years supervising student teachers in the
    New York City public school system.

    She says she was astonished at how the game helped improve cognitive
    capacities, even in kindergarten and first grade. "Children that young
    would begin with just a few pieces on the board," she says, "but they
    began learning how to anticipate moves and to think ahead."

    Rust says chess allows students to experience thinking itself,
    "something no other subject in the curriculum can do. . . . Children
    learn how to pull back and be alone with their thinking." That kind of
    reflective activity is invaluable for children, Rust concludes.

    Salome Thomas-EL has added chess as an elective course for third
    graders at Thomas A. Edison Charter School in Wilmington, where he is
    principal.

    "Chess isn't necessarily the primary purpose of the class," says
    Thomas-EL, who developed an acclaimed chess club in the 1990s when he
    was principal of Vaux High School in North Philadelphia.

    Thomas-EL writes about the importance of chess in his own life in his
    memoir, I Choose to Stay: A Black Teacher Refuses to Desert the Inner
    City. He says students exposed to chess learn to be less fatalistic.
    "So many young people are raised to believe that you are either born
    smart or born dumb," he says. "Chess shatters that fallacy. It's the
    great equalizer. It teaches you that you are not born smart, but you
    become smart."

    The salutary effects of chess aren't limited to the intellect. The
    game inspires positive behavioral changes, says Temple University's
    director of community relations, L. Harrison Jay, who leads a chess
    club for students at Meade Elementary School in North Philadelphia.

    "Chess makes you pay attention to the consequences of your actions and
    the value of the different decisions you make," he says. "Life is like
    a chess game. That is what we are teaching the kids. . . . Not that
    they must win, but that they are accountable for all their moves."

    Chess master and Temple University physics professor Leroy Dubeck,
    president of the United States Chess Federation from 1969 to 1972,
    says he spent decades advocating chess in American schools - to no
    avail.

    He predicts Kasparov's dream will flounder on the harsh economic
    realities facing American schools. "School district after school
    district is laying off teachers, getting rid of sports and arts
    programs," Dubeck says. "It's just not possible economically. . . . I
    speak from bitter experience."

    http://www.philly.com/philly/news/130922118.html?cmpid=15585797

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