Chess: Ancient Game, Modern Learning Tool
November 24, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Articles, Community

by Tim Hanke and Beatriz Marinello
In The Morals of Chess, Benjamin Franklin wrote:
The Game of Chess is not merely an idle amusement; several very valuable qualities of the mind, useful in the course of human life, are to be acquired and strengthened by it, so as to become habits ready on all occasions; for life is a kind of Chess, in which we have often points to gain, and competitors or adversaries to contend with, and in which there is a vast variety of good and ill events, that are, in some degree, the effect of prudence, or the want of it.
Chess has fascinated educators for generations as a pure intellectual activity that is not culture-bound. As a cross-cultural activity that appeals to people of all ages and both sexes, chess has the potential to be used in after-school programs, social clubs, senior centers?wherever people come together for education or recreation.
These days, chess is even being integrated into some school curricula: in the New Jersey public schools, in the Canadian Province of Quebec, and in a growing number of university campuses such as the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). Both of these universities offer academic scholarships to chessplayers, and UTD offers a graduate certificate program called “Chess in Education.”
Chess is versatile
Chess is interesting from many perspectives. It engages powers of reasoning, including calculation and visual-spatial reasoning, which is why chess has been such a popular object of study for scientists in the field of computer-based artificial intelligence. Chess also has been shown in studies to be an effective practical tool for teaching children to concentrate on a task?an important skill that often needs development. Studies in K?12 classrooms have shown a correlation between chess instruction and an increase in reading and other cognitive skills.
We must not forget that chess is also a game: a fun, competitive activity. Several non-scientific anecdotal reports in the media indicate that teaching chess to children, especially children in predominantly minority school districts, can increase the children?s self-confidence and self-esteem, leading to a general increase in the children?s overall school performance. Bob Cotter, an elementary school teacher in Indianapolis, took his team of inner-city kids to a national chess tournament. He reported that “After we won, the kids met the President, they traveled to Japan, and received all sorts of recognition.”1
A vignette
In an after-school chess program taught at the middle school level by one of the authors, one of the coolest and most rational chessplayers was a slim, self-contained girl about eleven years old, named Bernadette.
As in most chess classes and practically all chess tournaments, a large majority of the players were male. The chessplaying style of many of the boys was best described as rash optimism: they would play aggressive moves without thinking for long about the possible consequences, and hope for the best. The boys tended to “trash-talk” during their games, ridiculing the opponent and boasting about their own prospects.
But Bernadette thought before she moved. Watching her play, it was evident that she tried to work out a plan for her game. During her games she sat quietly, hardly ever speaking, except occasionally to express chagrin if something went wrong on the board. At the end of this article, we will return to Bernadette.

Chess teaches useful life skills
One or two studies suggest that chess skills are not transferable to tasks outside of chess, but these studies are narrowly defined. It is clear that we have few opportunities to play “king takes bishop” in our daily lives, and admittedly chess skill in itself does not automatically translate into financial rewards (except in chess tournaments!). Rather, as Benjamin Franklin wrote, chess is valuable because of the qualities of mind it promotes.
Here is a partial list of benefits that chess offers to educators and students:
Chess helps kids improve their concentration.
As a competitive activity, chess is very goal-oriented and rooted in the here-and-now. As such, it forces the player to pay attention and focus the mind. Children who learn to play chess have been observed to carry over improved habits of concentration to other activities. Beckie Levatino, mother of Elian, said, “Elian was having some problems in his Montessori school. I went to observe . . . and saw that he rushed through his activities, trying always to be the first one to finish. . . . We feel chess has helped him immeasurably, especially in learning how to slow down and concentrate on one thing.”2
Chess helps kids improve their academic performance.
For reasons not perfectly understood, children who are taught chess have been observed to raise their test scores in reading and math. Perhaps this is partly due to enhanced concentration ability. Also, chess has a strong element of visual-spatial reasoning, which relates to mathematics performance. “For young students, an independent study in Pennsylvania showed that those involved in chess classes improved their standardized test results by 17.3%, compared with only 4.56% for students participating in other activities.”3

Chess teaches kids to appreciate cause-and-effect and to develop a variety of reasoning skills.
Chess offers immediate feedback on the quality of decision making, in a relatively innocuous setting. Kingdoms may topple on the chessboard, but the players risk only a temporary blow to the ego! Math teacher and chess-club sponsor Jan Brandt, a Richmond, Virginia, mother of four, describes chess as, “probably the best game there is for developing logical, precise thinking.” Pete Shaw, a computer science teacher, has taught hundreds of kids in Pulaski, Virginia, to play chess. “It?s like turning on switches in their heads. You feel as though you can watch the brain working through a window. The game demands both inductive and deductive reasoning. You see the kid looking at a problem, breaking it down, and putting it back together. The process involves recall, analysis, judgment and abstract reasoning.”4
Chess helps kids become more self-confident.
Kids who learn to play chess gain confidence as they feel themselves gaining more control over the game environment. Confidence, as educators know, is the most transferable skill of all! According to Jeffrey Chesin, who teaches inner-city kids in Philadelphia, children do not have to be particularly bright to enjoy chess. “The majority of the kids I work with would be considered ?average.? Some are below average. But they get interested, and they work at it. Determination is definitely a factor.” Bob Cotter, the Indianapolis teacher, believes playing chess has helped his kids not only academically but socially: “For one thing, they see it doesn?t matter where you come from; if you set a goal and never lose sight of it, you can attain it.”5
Chess offers an intellectual model for developing expertise in any activity.
Advanced research suggests that chess expertise is acquired in two ways: (1) building up a database of knowledge; and (2) developing analytic skills. In Chessplayers? Thinking Revisited, Fernand Gobet argues for further research in this important realm, writing, “Even though each domain of expertise may have idiosyncratic properties, research on chess may help identify some of the potential conditions under which search, pattern recognition, or some combination of both, may be the best way to cope with the complexities of the environment.”
A vignette revisited
What about Bernadette, the 11-year-old girl who played chess with a coolness beyond her years? For the last session of the eight-week chess class, we organized students into two-person teams for a dramatic chess game played with giant pieces on a chessboard inlaid on the auditorium floor. Each two-person team took turns making their side?s moves, sharing the decision-making. Bernadette and her partner (another girl) could easily have become frustrated when their careful planning was thwarted by other teammates? decisions. Their side, “White,” lost many pieces and a victory by “Black” looked inevitable. However, the girls remained careful and attentive players, and did not despair. When their final turn came, they found an unlikely checkmate to steal the victory from their opponents.
Article reprinted from Connect (Vol.17 No.2, November/December, 2003)
Notes
1,2,4, and 5. The quotations were provided by Ann Graham in :”Chess Makes Kid Smart.”
3. Marcel Milat (2001). “The Role of Chess in Modern Education.” May be found on the Web CLICK HERE
Franklin, Benjamin. “The Morals of Chess.” On the Web CLICK HERE.
Copyright 2003 by Synergy Learning International, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tim Hanke – Tim was Vice President of Finance of the U.S. Chess Federation, author of many articles about chess, and has taught chess to children in after-school programs.
List all articles by Tim Hanke
Beatriz Marinello – Beatriz was the first woman President of the U.S. Chess Federation, a chess master, and a leading chess teacher of children.
List all articles by Beatriz Marinello
Chess: Ancient Game, Modern Learning Tool
World Chess Hall of Fame & Sidney Samole Museum to Relocate in 2010
November 1, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community

This Just In…
According to U.S. Chess Trust Chairman, Mr. Harold Winston, “The World Chess Hall of Fame and Sidney Samole Museum is temporarily closed pending relocation. Negotiations are in process to bring the World Chess Hall of Fame to St. Louis and we expect the Museum to reopen during 2010“.
The U.S. Chess Trust will be providing more information as it becomes available.
Be sure to check back with us soon!
“Developing Chess Talent – Chess and Autism”
October 26, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Articles, Community

GM Artur Yusupov training young talents in Apeldoorn (photo book cover by Fred Lucas)
Chess and Autism
Excerpt from ‘Developing Chess Talent’ by Karel and IM Merijn van Delft
Chess is a suitable sport for many children and adults with an Autism Spectrum Disorder. Scientific research on this subject is lacking, also on an international level. Experience indicates that chess stimulates social, emotional and cognitive development.
A new book, “Developing Chess Talent”, by Karel and IM Merijn van Delft, uses case histories to illustrate this assumption.
CLICK HERE TO READ “CHESS AND AUTISM ARTICLE by KAREL van DELFT (Excerpts from Book) (PDF)
The following Press Release provides you with more information about this book….
PRESS RELEASE Book ‘Developing Chess Talent’
The book ‘Developing Chess Talent’ will be published in April 2010. The subtitle is ‘How to create a chess culture by coaching, training, organization and communication’.
Authors are Karel van Delft and IM Merijn van Delft. The foreword is by GM Artur Yusupov. The translation is by Peter Boel. Publisher is KVDC (Karel van Delft Communication), Apeldoorn, The Netherlands.
‘Developing Chess Talent’ is a translation of the Dutch book ‘Schaaktalent ontwikkelen’ (KVDC, 2008). Please find attached the contents, as well as an article about chess and autism contained in the book. These texts may be reprinted on the condition that the original authors and the source are credited. The picture may also be published (credits: www.fredlucas.eu).
A month before publication of ‘Developing Chess Talent’, a preview with contents, parts of the text, the foreword by GM Artur Yusupov and some pictures from inside the book will be made available.
The book can be ordered via Karel van Delft, karel@kvdc.nl. The price is 24,50 euros plus 3 euros for postage handling.
Merijn van Delft and Karel van Delft are both psychologists. They were co-founders of the Apeldoorn chess foundation SBSA, which has trained several Dutch youth champions. Merijn van Delft is a professional chess trainer, living in Hamburg, Germany. Karel van Delft is a freelance publicist, living in Apeldoorn, The Netherlands.
The attachments are in pdf. If you prefer, we can send you versions in Word.
Sincerely, Karel van Delft
“Oral Ambassador of Chess”, Jerry Hanken, Passes Away
October 12, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community

Rest in Peace – Jerry Hanken (1934-2009)
Jerry Hanken, chess journalist, promoter and Life Master, passed away on October 1st, 2009 in Los Angeles at the age of 74. He leaves behind a saddened chess community. Jerry was an Original Life Master and Chess Life columnist. He is survived by his former wife, Barbara, and their children, Andrea and Dan.
Memorial Service
A memorial service for journalist, promoter and life master Jerry Hanken will be held on October 25th in Pasadena, California. (See details below)
Sunday, 3pm, October 25, 2009
Church of Truth
690 E. Orange Grove Blvd
Pasadena, CA 91104
Donations for the service and any questions can be sent to Barbara Hanken at 5200 Shearin, Los Angeles, CA 90041; bshanken@yahoo.com
Many in the chess community have shared their thoughts on the USCF’s website – Click Here to Read More…
Below you will find an article written by U.S. Chess Trust’s Chairman Emeritus & Trustee, Harold Dondis with Patrick Wolff for the Boston Globe, in memory of Jerry Hanken.
Our thoughts are with his family. May he rest in peace.
Feel free to share your thoughts and messages with the chess community by commenting on our site.
![]()
Chess Notes
By Harold Dondis and Patrick Wolff
The Boston Globe, www.boston.com
News has come to us via California that Jerry Hanken, very ill, was put on a ventilator and that his life ebbed away on Oct. 1. He was 74. Hanken has been one of the dominating personalities of the American chess scene for decades. He has been a politician, a battler, a reporter of great note, and to possibly sum it up, a man larger than life.
Hanken was a former probation officer and also an English teacher. He was elected to the board of the US Chess Federation (USCF) for many years, and his battles there were as unstinting and articulate as one could imagine. Whether or not such battles were good for the USCF is now beside the point. Hanken was a dedicated member of the board, and he was the foremost translator of chess for chess fans. He was a life master and could always be found at major tournaments. He was the clear choice to write reports on the tournaments as they occurred. In this function, he was the center of the tournament’s energy, always providing effulgent reports on the personalities and the happenings in the tourney. He did not hesitate to write about himself, but always with a high humor for which there were no peers in this game.
As we recall, Hanken was the center of a controlling majority on the board in 1991-1993, in an interlude of no president in office between the tenures of Maxim Dlugy and Dennis Barry. It was in the latter’s term that the debates at the USCF executive board virtually exploded. Hanken was a supporter of the right to debate OMOV (One Man One Vote for members in elections), the resolution that was adopted providing for direct election of the executive board. Hanken’s debates made Cicero sound like a soft-spoken introvert. He bawled oratorical threats and even disrobed in part to emphasize his position.
It was sad to see Hanken appearing of late in a wheelchair, but still reporting to his public with optimism and piquant comments. It was even sadder to hear that his health had declined, and that he was determined not to return to a nursing home, which he inimitably described as Dickensian. He announced that if he was ever sent back he would get a second opinion from Doctor Kevorkian, and he was finally put on a ventilator for his last days. Hanken recently captained the Journalists of America, and received their awards as humorist and journalist of the year. He could quote poetry not only by the yard but also by the mile. He knew Stephen Vincent Benét’s long epic poem “John Brown’s Body’’ by heart, and would emit it with forensic accomplishment at the slightest request. Recently he took time out to send us a disc, in which he recited poetry of Robert Frost, T.S. Eliot, Edwin Arlington Robinson, and Edna St. Vincent Millay.
Jerry Hanken, the Oral Ambassador of Chess, has now left the stage.
The Chess Player As An Artist: Marcel Duchamp
September 25, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Articles, Community, News

In recognition of Marcel Duchamp: The Art of Chess exhibit currently on display at the Francis Naumann Gallery in New York City (Sept. 10th – Oct. 30th, 2009), we are running this article, previously published on our website in 2007.
Francis M. Naumann Fine Art, LLC
24 West 57th Street, Suite 305
New York, NY 10019
Tel: 212.582.3201
Gallery Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday
11:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Marcel Duchamp Article (Previously published on our website 2007)
“…I HAVE COME TO THE PERSONAL CONCLUSION THAT WHILE ALL ARTISTS ARE NOT CHESS PLAYERS, ALL CHESS PLAYERS ARE ARTISTS.” MARCEL DUCHAMP
BIOGRAPHY OF MARCEL DUCHAMP 1887-1968:
Henri-Robert-Marcel Duchamp was born July 28, 1887, near Blainville, France.
In 1904, he joined his artist brothers, Jacques Villon and Raymond Duchamp-Villon, in Paris, where he studied painting at the Academie Julian until 1905.
Duchamps early works were Post-Impressionist in style. He exhibited for the first time in 1909 at the Salon des Independants and the Salon d’ Automne in Paris.
His paintings of 1911 were directly related to Cubism but emphasized successive images of a single body in motion.
In 1912, he painted the definitive version of Nude Descending a Staircase; this was shown at the Salon de la Section d’Or of that same year and subsequently created great controversy at the Armory Show in New York in 1913.
Duchamps radical and iconoclastic ideas predated the founding of the Dada movement in Zurich in 1916.
By 1913, he had abandoned traditional painting and drawing for various experimental forms, including mechanical drawings, studies, and notations that would be incorporated in a major work, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (1915-23; also known as The Large Glass).
In 1914, Duchamp introduced his ready made common objects, sometimes altered, presented as works of art, which had a revolutionary impact upon many painters and sculptors.
In 1915, Duchamp traveled to New York, where his circle included Katherine Dreier and Man Ray, with whom he founded the Societe Anonyme in 1920, as well as Louise and Walter Arensberg, Francis Picabia, and other avant-garde figures.
After playing chess avidly for nine months in Buenos Aires, Duchamp returned to France in the summer of 1919 and associated with the Dada group in Paris.
In New York in 1920, he made his first motor-driven constructions and invented Rrose Slavy, his feminine alter ego.
Duchamp moved back to Paris in 1923 and seemed to have abandoned art for chess but in fact continued his artistic experiments.
From the mid-1930s, he collaborated with the Surrealists and participated in their exhibitions.
Duchamp settled permanently in New York in 1942 and became a United States citizen in 1955.
During the 1940s, he associated and exhibited with the Surrealist migrs in New York, and in 1946 began Etant donnes: 1. la chute d’eau 2. le gaz d’clairage, a major assemblage on which he worked secretly for the next 20 years.
He died October 2, 1968, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France.
A PASSION FOR CHESS:
Marcel Duchamp had a lifelong passion for chess.
He once said “I am still a victim of chess. It has all the beauty of art – and much more. It cannot be commercialized. Chess is much purer than art in its social position.”
March 1952, Duchamp had given up painting in favor of chess thirty years before.
Marcel Duchamp played thousands of chess games, and he was known as a very strong Chess Master.
Duchamp’s creativity had a significant impact in art. One wonders how chess influenced his way of thinking and his views about art and creativity.
Duchamp once said:
“The chess pieces are the block alphabet which shapes thoughts; and these thoughts, although making a visual design on the chess-board, express their beauty abstractly, like a poem…. I have come to the personal conclusion that while all artists are not chess players, all chess players are artists.” Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968), French artist, address, Aug. 30, 1952, New York State Chess Association.
Duchamp was not only an avid chessplayer; he was also an active member of the chess community and made multiple contributions to chess, which will also made him a chess philanthropist.
THE MOVIE – PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST: MARCEL DUCHAMP – A GAME OF CHESS (1963):
This movie is an interview segment with the French artist. Filmed in black-and-white, this interview was held at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1963. Duchamp discusses his theories on the game of chess, his expatriate status in America, and his decision to stop working after 1923.
“Chess Phenom Yet to Meet Her Match” (DailyNews.com)
September 3, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community, News

By Dennis McCarthy
From DailyNews.com
Updated: 09/02/2009 06:30:52 PM PDT
Don’t let her young age and friendly demeanor fool you, her coaches say. The kid has the heart of a champion and the brains to match.
She’ll steal your queen, knock over your king, and be relaxing on the couch watching cartoons on TV before your seat’s even warm.
Simone Laio is that good. At 10.
The Agoura Hills girl just returned from Argentina with a gold medal in her age bracket at the Pan-American Youth Chess Championships attended by players from 17 countries.
She had something to prove. Last year, she won the silver. Not this year.
“Going for the gold creates a lot of stress and requires extreme focus,” says Beatriz Marinello, U.S. Youth Team coach and former president of the U.S. Chess Federation.
“Simone demonstrated that excelling at competitive chess involves more than talent and hard work, but also a winning mentality, which she definitely possesses.”
She’s an out-and-out champion, says Aviv Friedman, head of the U.S. Chess Delegation and coach of the U.S. team.
“She has fantastic talent and work ethic, which propels her to one success after another,” he says. “What a bright future she has in chess.”
CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT WWW.DAILYNEWS.COM
GM Maurice Ashley: Chess Day (Video)
August 2, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community
GM Maurice Ashley on Virginia This Morning!
2nd Annual Schein-Friedman Awards Announced
June 24, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community, News, Scholastic Chess

PRESS RELEASE
2nd Annual Schein-Friedman Awards Announced !
The Schein – Friedman Scholastic Recognition Project is glad to announce its second year scholarship recipients.
The first and second place recipients were tied by FM Darwin Yang and WIM Alisa Melekhina, who will each receive a $4000 scholarship. Third place goes to Luke Harmon, who will receive a $2000 scholarship.
Darwin Yang, who hails from Texas, is at 12 one of the country’s leading talents. Number 1 for his age group, he is a National Scholastic champion, a Pan American gold medallist, and a bronze medallist at the recent World Youth (under age 12) championship. A NM over 2300, Darwin’s results have been stellar, and his aspirations for reaching the highest title are justified!
Pennsylvania’s Alisa Melekhina is a multi-time US representative and high place finisher at many world championships and other world events. Thanks to an impressive progress in recent years, she is also a NM with a rating of 2300+, a WIM and has her first IM and WGM norm. Alisa is the top girl for her age group, was the youngest participant at the 2007 US Invitational championship.
10-year-old Luke Harmon is an expert level player, and Idaho’s highest rated active player. A two-time National Scholastic champion, he currently ranks at #2 nationally for his age group. Luke has been working hard on his chess, playing in challenging open tournaments, and training vigorously for his goals: an immediate one to become a master, and a longer term other of becoming one of the country’s leading GMs.
The project is designed to help some of our younger champions improve and dedicate themselves more to chess, while offsetting the financial expenses that usually come with those.
Hopefully the project will reward excelling youngsters, and help them become tomorrow’s best players and Grandmasters. At the same time they would be serving as role models and inspiration to the entire scholastic community.
The program is generally designed for youngsters age 7-17. Occasionally, in cases of unusual excellence (considerably exceeding the program’s criterions), applications by players up to age 20 would be considered.
Congratulations to all the recipients!
Mark Schein and Aviv Friedman
Schein – Friedman Scholastic Recognition Project
June 13, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community, Scholastic Chess

Reminder! Deadline Approaching – June 20, 2009
Schein – Friedman Scholastic Recognition Project: PRESS RELEASE
Mark Schein and Aviv Friedman, in cooperation with the U.S. Chess Trust, are happy to announce their second annual scholastic recognition project.
The project is designed to help some of our younger champions continue to improve and dedicate themselves to chess while offsetting some of the financial expense. The project is designed to reward some top-rated youngsters, and help them become tomorrow’s best players and eventual Grandmasters. These youngsters will be serving as role models and inspiration to the entire scholastic community.
The program is generally designed for youngsters age 7-17. Occasionally, in cases of unusual excellence (considerably exceeding the program’s criterions), applications by players up to age 20 would be considered, but in a lower priority to applicants under age 17.
The scholarships for 2009 are:
The top recipient will get $5,000; the second recipient will get $3,000; and the third $2,000.
Applicants must have been US citizens or permanent legal residents for a minimum of 18 months prior to the deadline date (June 20th for 2009). They must show dedication to chess, talent and accomplishment. They also must exhibit a will to work hard and improve, as well as good sportsmanship and a positive attitude. Applicants must be active tournament players
The minimum ratings qualification formula is as follows:
Ages 7-14: age * 100 + 1000 for boys, and age * 100 + 800 for girls.
Ages 15-16: age * 100 + 900 for boys, and age * 100 + 700 for girls.
Age 17: 2500 for boys, 2300 for girls.
All applications should be in the form of an essay, describing the applicant’s chess accomplishments, and why he or she should receive a scholarship.
They should be sent via e-mail to Aviv Friedman at avivster@hotmail.com .
A Special Thanks to Our 2009 Donors
May 2, 2009 by Chess Press
Filed under Community
Comments Off

A Special Thanks To Our Jan., Feb. & March 2009 Donors!
Your Support Helps Us Make a Difference! Remember, thanks to your donations we can provide Programs/Resources for the chess community!
March 2009 Donors
Ben Franklin Donors ($1,000 or more)
British International School of New York
Leroy Dubeck
Jim Eade
Mark Schein (Schein-Freidman)
Adam Semler
Heritage Donors ($500 or more)
Leo Dubler
Erlend & Ruth Millikan
Associates ($50 or more)
Ken Champney
Lucy Tsai
WM Bluestone
Cecelia Vonderheide
AT & T
Richard Cheshire
John & Emily Summy
Thomas & Nancy Simpson
Contributors ($25 or more)
William & Diane Easton
Hans & Marlene Bogatsch
February 2009 Donors
Associates ($50 or more)
Nugent & Haeussler
Gilbert Saulter
Arthur Lewis
Steve Doyle
Contributors ($25 or more)
LA Sounders (In Memory of Mark Diesen)
Taft Dantzler
January 2009 Donors
Ben Franklin Donors ($1,000 or more)
Karl Irons
Nearing Trust
Associates ($50 or more)
Robert Werdann
Gordon Gray
Kurt Klunder
Donald Farrelly
Robert Goodman
George Hermes
Roy Eikerenkoetter
Michael Styler
Tom Beckman
Lewis Henry
Robert Pociask
Peter Knopf
Thomas Richardson
Capt. Gary D. Black
William Wright
Earl Salinger
Contributors ($25 or more)
Alan Zimmerman
John Stiff
Bruce Brandt
William Smith
Kenneth Bearman
Anthony Jasaitis
Helen Harrow
Thanks to everyone for your continued support!






