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Thoughts About A Generation Of Armenian Chess Masters

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  • Thoughts About A Generation Of Armenian Chess Masters

    THOUGHTS ABOUT A GENERATION OF ARMENIAN CHESS MASTERS

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/25052/thoughts-about-a-generation-of-armenian-chess-masters.html
    23:07, April 2, 2013

    I want to finally comment on an article that appeared on Motherboard
    lauding the Armenian Ministry of Education for making chess education
    in schools compulsory. Apparently the Armenian government has finally
    realized that the incessant brain drain will leave the country with
    an inadequate leadership in the not so distant future. The idea is
    that by playing chess regularly, kids will learn how to strategize and
    hone their decisiveness. This move contrasts with the Chinese method
    of producing a master intellectual race by meddling with genes. The
    Armenian government has already spent $3 million on facilities and
    equipment.

    "Chess develops various skills - leadership capacities,
    decision-making, strategic planning, logical thinking and
    responsibility," Minister of Education Armen Ashotyan told Al
    Jazeera in a recent interview. "We are building these traits in
    our youngsters."

    Yet in parallel the Armenian government should also be taking
    initiatives to ensure that those youngsters will remain in the country
    10 or 15 years from now. It's no secret that the quality of education
    provided by public colleges and universities is by and large mediocre
    at best and bribe taking is a common practice within faculties.

    Investment in information technologies and science industry is still
    relatively low, which means the jobs they will expect probably won't
    be there when they graduate and want to enter the workforce unless
    policies change now. Ashotyan himself paradoxically stated last
    November that scientists are better off working outside Armenia.

    My clear concern is that they won't be able to apply those traits
    of critical thinking and leadership in their own society and would
    rather be compelled to pursue conduits through which to conduct
    those skills outside Armenia. Drastically needed nation building may
    not happen to its maximal capabilities if this upcoming crop of new
    talent is not permitted to utilize their skills alongside an explicit
    criminal-obsessed subculture that tends to spurn intellect. You can
    only have so many players on the national chess team.

    Read full article in Footprints http://blog.hetq.am/

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