Pawned!

For The Love of the Game.

Schools Chess Club is Very Relative.

Published: April 4, 2008

LAND O’ LAKES – For the Levisons, an after-school chess club at Pine View Elementary is a family affair.

The club got its start when 7-year-old Josh was looking for an activity after a hip disease put him in a wheelchair and left his dream of playing youth soccer in a holding pattern. His 8-year-old sister, Bree, also participates.

So do about 20 other children who meet each Friday to challenge each other across a chessboard and to learn tips from instructors from a chess club that is based in Temple Terrace.

For Josh, it started with a half-day chess camp last summer.

“When I came to pick him up, he said he wanted to stay the whole day,” said his mother, Lisa Levison. “He just loves it.”

Levison, who volunteers at the school, thought Pine View could use an after-school chess club, and the principal agreed with her. On a recent Friday, 10 games were in progress in the school’s media center as instructors Jeff York and James Barber monitored the action and offered advice.

To view a photo gallery of Pine View’s chess club, go to TBO.com, Keyword: Chess.

Ronnie Blair

April 4, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Kids, clubs | | No Comments Yet

Even in Tough Times, School Chess Program Has Right Moves.

team

From Amanda Gordon, The N.Y. Sun

A champion of giving, Lewis Cullman, acknowledged Tuesday night at the Chess-in-the-Schools benefit that the economy is making it more difficult for organizations to raise money.

However, Chess-in-the-Schools, which last year taught chess and improved the academic prospects for 20,000 students in the public schools, hasn’t felt the pinch.

“We’ve done it again this year: We’ve raised more than $1 million, in a year when people are very concerned, when people are suddenly giving excuses. Our donors do not.”

Perhaps they can’t say no to Mr. Cullman or the other persuasive board members, such as Cody Smith and Muffy Flouret. Or perhaps Chess-in-the-Schools supporters can’t say no because the gala is so successful at conveying the benefits of the program.

The organization gets its message across by inviting students not only to attend the event, but to make their presence, and their stories, known.

Tony Thompson, 18, has been involved with Chess-in-the-Schools since he was 8. He attended the event in a new suit purchased for the occasion at Access Men’s Clothing in the Kings Plaza mall. The Brooklyn Technical High School senior has been accepted into 10 colleges and wants to be a doctor. By the time he talked to me at the end of the cocktail hour, he’d already told about a dozen other guests his story. He had also played some chess (his favorite opening moves: Queen’s Gambit for white, Sicilian Defense for black).

“Playing chess has been a confidence boost. You learn how to think ahead. I’m glad I stuck with it because it helped me get into college,” Mr. Thompson said.

Chess also teaches valuable life lessons.

“I’ve lost a lot of games, and every loss gives you a burning desire to do better,” a junior at Stuyvesant High School, Mahfuzer Miah, said. “It’s how well you play at the moment. People don’t worry about their past defeats.”

The program provides chess lessons and weekly tournament experience, as well as academic tutoring, mentoring, college counseling, and travel opportunities. In addition to deploying its own instructors, last year the organization launched a program to train public school teachers to become chess instructors, which was funded by a grant from the City Council.

“Players continually must face new positions and new problems. They cannot solve these by using a simple formula or relying on memorized answers,” the executive director of Chess-in-the-Schools, Marley Kaplan said. “Instead, they must analyze and calculate while relying on a dose of creativity — skills that increasingly mirror what students must confront in their schoolwork and life.”

Robin MacNeil presented $3,500 checks from Chess-in-the-Schools to three seniors, to help them with college expenses: Mr. Thompson, Khalid Francis and Akil Griffiths.

Mr. MacNeil also confessed his personal deficiencies at chess, dating back to a match he played in college, against his girlfriend’s 6-year-old brother. He lost. “And the girlfriend didn’t last either — her choice,” Mr. MacNeil said.

agordon@nysun.com

Read Entire Story Here.

April 3, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Kids, News, clubs | | No Comments Yet

UTD Chess Program.

Brief interviews with top world players studying at the University of Texas at Dallas.

Youtube video from Littlepeasant .

March 31, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Kids, Media, Video, clubs | | 1 Comment

Team-O Exposed!!! Antarctic Chess League Foiled!

antartctic chess league

Michael Truth talks about this amazing moment captured on video –

“The Federation of Oxymoronic Sports has resurfaced and this video proves it! Watch these top secret chess players scramble in deep snow to their getaway – as I get everything on tape!!! Everything – except their faces or any other identifiable evidence.

Team-O Website.

March 30, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, History, Humor, Interview, Media, Video | | 1 Comment

Amazing Mind Over Matter.

Bel Air High teen manages disability with guts, brains

By Cassandra A. Fortin

Special to The Sun
March 30, 2008

Cohen leaves a lasting impression on people.

A junior at Bel Air High School, the 16-year-old has a 3.8 grade point average and was recently inducted into the National Honor Society. After graduation, he wants to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Although he excels academically, he does it from an electric wheelchair, with the assistance of an entourage of caregivers and teachers.

“I’m not able to do much on my own,” Ofek said with a shrug. “I’m very weak. I can’t walk or write or pick things up. I need help doing everything.”

But Ofek has never let his physical limitations hold him back. He was diagnosed with Type II spinal muscular atrophy, a hereditary disease of the muscles that affects 1 in 6,000 children.

The disorder causes a loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord that results in weakness and wasting of muscles used for crawling, walking, standing and sitting up. There is no cure for SMA, and treatment consists of managing the symptoms.

Tom Crawford, a pediatric neurologist at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center who met Ofek about 15 years ago, said he hasn’t changed much since then.

“Ofek is almost the same, as far as what he can do for himself, as he was when I met him,” Crawford said. “He is profoundly weak. He can’t do something as simple as bringing his hands up to his face.”

However, Ofek doesn’t dwell on what he can’t do, said his mother, Michelle Cohen-Hammond. Instead, he focuses on what he can do, she said.

“Ofek is like a little Michelangelo,” said Cohen-Hammond. “He’s self-taught. He has an amazing mind. Some kids with SMA grow up with parents who bring the world to them. But when Ofek was little, I took him out into the world.”

On one occasion, she wanted Ofek to know what it would feel like to stand up, so she put him in a standing frame and took him to the mall, she said.

Perhaps his biggest asset is his memory, which comes in handy when he engages in one of his favorite pastimes — chess.

Unable to participate in high school sports, Ofek wanted to do something competitive, he said. He had taught himself how to play chess, but he wanted to take it to the next level.

He helped start a chess club at Bel Air High, but it was short-lived because the teacher who sponsored the club became ill. However, last year a chess tournament was started in the county, Ofek said. He won the first tournament, and then won again this year.

To help give his game a little boost, Ofek said he received tutoring in chess last year from Dan Heisman, who is a U.S. Chess Federation National Master.

Ofek believes his opponents have an advantage over him when he plays chess. But Ofek has overcome that advantage by thinking multiple steps ahead when he plays, said Bill Wardle, the teacher who sponsored the chess tournament.

“Ofek is good at analyzing the situation when he plays chess,” said Wardle, who teaches math at Aberdeen High. “He rarely makes a mistake.”

Because of his illness, Ofek said he has to have his opponent move his chess pieces.

“It sounds like I may have an advantage, but the truth is, it makes it easier for my opponents to estimate my moves,” said Ofek, who was born in Israel but moved to Maryland when he was a young boy. He and his family now live in Abingdon.

Although Ofek doesn’t share a lot about what he goes through with his peers, he has used his story to help raise money for the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, has been a guest speaker at public engagements, and has served as a state ambassador for the muscular dystrophy association, he said.

“I try to do whatever I can,” Ofek said. “But thinking is really all I can do. I’m really proud of my ability to think.”

Ofek has come a long way since his diagnosis, his mother said. Originally, she was told his prognosis was death by age one.

Unwilling to accept a death sentence for her son, his mother began researching the disease. She brought him to Maryland, where he was treated by doctors at Johns Hopkins and the Kennedy Krieger Institute.

“Since then, we have looked at his disease as a birth defect that he has to live with,” she said. “Not something he has to die from.”

Ofek has adjusted to his illness, but some days it can be depressing, he said.

“I can’t go anywhere or do anything,” he said. “I have to rely on other people for everything I do.”

Richard Kelley, the director of the division of metabolism at Kennedy Krieger, became acquainted with Ofek when he received a call from Ofek’s mother, who was living in California at the time, he said.

Kelley helped Ofek through a metabolic crisis, he said. He created a special formula for him that included corn starch, to shorten his overnight fasting period from 10 to 4 hours, he said.

“A healthy person fasts at night and part of their muscle mass is broken down and turned into sugar,” he said. “The problem comes with a child who has 20 percent of the muscle mass his peers have. He still has to produce the same amount of glucose.”

Although he will never lead the life of a normal teenager, Ofek has a great personality and outlook on life, Kelley said.

“Ofek is very verbal, knowledgeable and articulate,” Kelley said. “He charms you.”

His 7-year-old sister, Orly, said she has learned to be more compassionate because of her brother.

“Ofek is very fragile,” Orly said. “He’s different from other people who can walk and other stuff.”

Orly gave an account of an incident at school where she joined the children who had to sit at a special table in the cafeteria.

“We have a table that is called the red zone in the cafeteria at school,” Orly said. “The kids who sit at the table are allergic to peanuts. I went over and sat with them. I try to be nice to people who are different.”

Read Entire Story Here.

March 30, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Art, Chess, Education, Interview, Kids | | No Comments Yet

Idaho Turns to Chess as Education Strategy.

idaho chess

By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN – N.Y. Times

Once a week, Deborah McCoy, a third-grade teacher in Donnelly, Idaho, unpacks chessboards and pieces and spends an hour teaching her 20 students how to play the game.

Mrs. McCoy does not do this because she is passionate about chess; she barely knew how to play before this school year. But she began teaching it as part of an unusual pilot program under way in more than 100 second- and third-grade classrooms across Idaho.

On Thursday, state officials will announce in Boise that the program will be extended in the fall to all second and third graders — making Idaho the first state to offer a statewide chess curriculum.

The state’s $1.5 billion education budget, passed two weeks ago, includes a guarantee to finance the instruction. Tom Luna, the state’s superintendent of education, said participation by teachers would be voluntary, but if reaction to the pilot program is any measure, interest will be great.

There are no studies showing that teaching chess has benefits for children, but there is anecdotal evidence, Mr. Luna said.

“One of the things that we hear is that too much of what we do is based on rote memorization,” Mr. Luna said. “The part I really like about this program is that kids are thinking ahead.”

Mrs. McCoy said she has been pleased with the results.

“So many kids spend their time plugged into video games, iPods, television and so they are more isolated,” she said. “They learn give and take in chess. There are courtesies that you follow. It has been really beneficial for them.”

Idaho has 40,000 second and third graders, and Mr. Luna estimated the instruction will cost about $200,000 to $250,000 a year, although it could run as much as $600,000 “if everybody jumped on it the first year,” he said. The money is expected to come from reducing administrative expenses in the school system, though state officials said they had not yet identified where the savings would be made.

Idaho is using a curriculum called First Move, which was developed by America’s Foundation for Chess, a nonprofit, Seattle-based organization that promotes teaching chess in school. First Move is now taught to 25,000 students in 18 states, according to Wendi Fischer, the vice president of the foundation.

Rourke O’Brien, the foundation’s president, said the idea to introduce chess into Idaho’s school system arose out of a discussion between Erik Anderson, the foundation’s founder, and Roy Lewis Eiguren, a lawyer and lobbyist who lives in Idaho.

Mr. Anderson and Mr. Eiguren sit on the board of the Avista Corporation, an energy company based in neighboring Washington. After hearing about the benefits of teaching chess, Mr. Eiguren set up a dinner early last year and invited Mr. Luna, Karen McGee, an education-policy adviser to the governor, and three Republican state lawmakers — Representatives Eric Anderson (no relation to Erik Anderson) and Bob Nonini, and Senator John W. Goedde.

The dinner participants agreed to create the pilot program, and Mr. Nonini volunteered to provide $600 of his own money to pay for one of the classrooms in his district for a year, Mr. O’Brien said. The rest of the cost, about $60,000, was paid by the state.

First Move differs from some other chess-in-school programs in that it is taught by classroom teachers and is intended as a curriculum enhancement for second and third graders. It incorporates elements of math, history and vocabulary.

Teachers who wish to use it do not need to know chess. They are trained at seminars over a day or two before the school year starts, and are provided with an instructional DVD, a DVD player, chess sets, boards, online resources and a manual. Every other week, an experienced player is available to answer questions.

Mrs. McCoy said her town was so remote — Donnelly is about a two-hour drive from Boise — that the expert player, Mark Morales, was available only online, but she had found that was adequate. She said it was good for her students to be exposed to a sophisticated game like chess.

“Donnelly is approximately 250 people,” she said. “We are right smack dab in the mountains. Most of our kids live on ranches or in small towns.”

Read story in it’s entirety here.

March 20, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Kids, Media, News, clubs | | No Comments Yet

Fear This.

We shouldn’t be lamenting or fearing the fact that computers can play chess better than humans. We should fear this!

March 19, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Media, Video, Writing | | 2 Comments

More 4-Way Chess.

Here’s another video describing 4-way chess. From Taurusgames.

March 14, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Chess, Education, Video | | No Comments Yet

100 Chess Book Reviews by Blue Devil Knight – Part 4.

BDK’s youtube series describing his library of chess books continues.

Previous Book Review Videos -

Part 1.

Part 2

Part 3.

Check out his blog – Confessions of a Chess Novice.

March 14, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Books, Chess, Education, Video | | No Comments Yet

Inside The Alfonso X Manuscript.

About the video:

A video showing the insides of the Alfonso X manuscript facsimile. Only several pages are viewed as the total pages in the manuscript amounts to 98 pages.

In 1283 Libros del Axedrez dados y tablas (Book of Chess and other games) was written for King Alfonso X (1221-1284), King of Castile. It was the first encyclopedia of games in European literature. The first of the 7 parts of the Alfonso manuscript is devoted wholly to chess, and contains 103 problems. It also includes descriptions of several chess variants. (Source: Bill Wall) .

Youtube video from Xposthmous.

March 13, 2008 Posted by n8ux | Art, Chess, Education, History, Video, Writing | | No Comments Yet