Posts Tagged ‘chess piece’

Misconception: Is the King Ever Taken?

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Written by Laura Sherman of YourChessCoach.com

One common misconception that I hear a lot, is that in a game of chess, the king can be captured. It makes sense, since every other chess piece can be taken. However, during the game, the king is never removed from the board.

Sometimes a student of ours will become puzzled because their parent or grandparent will insist that the king can be captured. After all, it was how they were taught.

After I ran into this problem a few times, I started offering to give parents a free 1-hour lesson. The purpose was so that they could play with their children in between lessons, and we’d all be on the same page.

When I hit on this concept, I was pregnant, so I would stipulate that they needed to buy me coffee and a scone (I’d get hungry at the drop of a hat). It was a hit and I’ve kept it in as a tradition. Even though I’m no longer pregnant, I still ask for a scone. I like scones.

One father pointed out that sometimes people knock the king over. Perhaps that helps to create a confusion.

Knocking over the king is more of a dramatic statement than a true ritual of chess. It looks good in a picture or movie, but you rarely see the gesture in a tournament. Certainly you wouldn’t knock over your opponent’s king (that would be very rude).

One friend pointed out that throughout history, when a war was won, the losing king was often permitted to live, out of respect. Perhaps this is the reason that the king isn’t captured in chess – it mirrors life.

Whatever the reason, trust me, you do not remove the king from the board. He stays on, through to the very end. If you have any questions on this, buy me a coffee and a scone, and we can talk about it some more.

Laura Sherman founded Your Chess Coach (YourChessCoach.com) with her husband, Dan Sherman. Together they teach children to play chess through various schools in Pinellas County, Florida, as well as online. You can learn more about YourChessCoach and other local and online chess instructors on our Chess Instructors page.

If you would like to ask Laura a question about chess, you can ask the question in the comment space below, leave your email, and Laura will respond directly to you – OR – you can always find YourChessCoach on Twitter or visit her new blog.

Chess Develops Teamwork

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Written by Laura Sherman of YourChessCoach.com

Chess develops a sense of teamwork amongst children. After all they are a general in charge of 16 chess pieces, marshalling them all toward the enemy king’s defeat.

Each piece has benefits and weaknesses. If you only play with a favorite chess piece, you will learn how limiting that piece is. Even the queen doesn’t work well by herself. She needs other chess pieces to really launch a successful attack.

When you use pieces together, they become more powerful.

In life, teamwork is essential. As a mother of three I can attest that the family doesn’t run well when there’s no Sherman Team concept. When we are all on the same page, channeling our efforts in the same direction, we can accomplish a lot!

I’ve seen our chess students become more interested in team sports after they learn chess. Soccer, baseball, football all become more fun.

In school there are many activities that require your child to work with other children. Whether they are part of a school play or they’re creating a science project with a class, teamwork enters in.

As children grow up and enter the workforce, teamwork will become a point of survival. Those who add to the group, work well with the other members, will most likely keep their jobs and get promoted, becoming leaders in their field.

Laura Sherman founded Your Chess Coach (YourChessCoach.com) with her husband, Dan Sherman. Together they teach children to play chess through various schools in Pinellas County, Florida, as well as online. You can learn more about YourChessCoach and other local and online chess instructors on our Chess Instructors page.

If you would like to ask Laura a question about chess, you can ask the question in the comment space below, leave your email, and Laura will respond directly to you – OR – you can always find YourChessCoach on Twitter or visit her new blog.

Chess Starts with the Basics

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Written by Laura Sherman of YourChessCoach.com and Bill Kilpatrick

Chess is taught by starting with the basics and building from there. It has to be done step by step. It is a big mistake to skip ahead too quickly with new strategies or techniques, when the more basic concepts are not well understood by a young chess player.

Teaching “checkmate” is a perfect example.

Coaches quickly learn it’s a big challenge to teach children the concept of checkmate.

We have found that many beginners have trouble checkmating their opponents despite having an overwhelming advantage of pieces on the chess board. So how do you teach this seemingly basic concept?

Break it down! Simplify it! Pull checkmate apart into little pieces that can be learned, one at a time.

The first step is to drill easier concepts with your students. How do you attack a chess piece? When is a piece in danger? How do you trap a piece? There are dozens of such exercises that are needed in order to fully prepare the student to understand and apply the concept of checkmate.

Once they have these components down, they must be able to recognize when the king is in check and understand that concept fully. Quiz them on the number of escape squares the king has. This usually requires a bit of drilling, but there will come a point where the student knows it, really knows it.

Being able to recognize when a student has a concept and is able to move on is also important. The last thing you want to do is rehash something over and over that they already understand. There’s a certain look that a student gets when they fully understand something. Watch for that look, that confident gleam in their eye.

Now they will have an easier time grasping checkmate. Show them many examples. Stick with exercises that are checkmate in one move, starting with extremely easy and basic positions. The more you drill these with your student the faster they will pick up the themes and be able to recognize reoccurring patterns.

Checkmate needs to be drilled regularly and often. The result will be that your students will take advantage of more opportunities on the board and you will have a strong foundation from which to move forward.

Laura Sherman founded Your Chess Coach (YourChessCoach.com) with her husband, Dan Sherman. Together they teach children to play chess through various schools in Pinellas County, Florida, as well as privately in students’ homes and online. Your Chess Coach is devoted to teaching chess to children of all ages, giving them the many life skills that the game offers. You can learn more about YourChessCoach and other local and online chess instructors on our Chess Instructors page. Bill Kilpatrick, founder of several professional specialty schools, brings an entrepreneurial spirit to chess coaching. Together they provide consulting around the globe helping improve the ability of coaches, parents and educators to teach chess to children.

If you would like to ask Laura a question about chess, you can ask the question in the comment space below, leave your email, and Laura will respond directly to you – OR – you can always find YourChessCoach on Twitter.