MonRoi

Because last week I showed the YouTube clip (search for “Denton Living Chess Game” on YouTube) of my public library class acting out a Reti endgame while dressed as Super Mario characters, today I brought in a Super Mario chess set for four players to use for a tandem game. Other students conducted post mortems (analysis of completed ladder games), played speed chess, or completed ladder games. More details can be found at the Denton High School Web site, under Activities—Chess Club.

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MonRoi

On November 12, Denton High School chess club sponsor Fred Mueller announced that we might acquire a living chess board. I talked about the importance of scripting living chess games, a topic covered in my forthcoming book The Living Chess Game: Fine Arts Activities for Kids 9-14. Then students who had ladder games to finish went to another room. Other students had a post mortem, played tandem chess, and watched the YouTube video “Denton Living Chess Game.”

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MonRoi

Explore Chess for Academic Success on Sunday, November 14, 2010, 2-4 p.m. at New Tech High School (113 Samuel Blvd Coppell, TX 75019).  The Coppell Gifted Association provides more details at this link. I will be presenting activities from my four books.

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MonRoi

At Denton High School (DHS) Chess Club today, I talked about a possible upcoming tournament. One problem in deciding on date to participate in a tournament is that the high school students have so many other activities: UIL (University Interscholastic League) competitions, orchestra, choir, and tennis are especially popular with DHS chess club members. Do my blog readers think this is why participation in chess tournaments declines by high school? DHS also had ladder chess games, which were notated to analyze next Friday.

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MonRoi

New in Chess (Alkmaar, The Netherlands) sent me a review copy of its 2010 book Checkmate for children: Mastering the most important skill in chess by Kevin Stark (translated from the German by Peter Boel). Beginners must know how all the chessmen move before starting this book. This book could be helpful for beginners ages ten and older (or younger children with an adult’s help) for three reasons.

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MonRoi

On Friday, October 29 (4-5 p.m.), I gave a 30-minute lecture about chess ratings and international titles. The handouts "Calculating ratings" and "International Titles and USCF ratings" are available on the Denton High School Chess Club Web site. One question we discussed is whether an amateur chess player has a better chance to defeat a Grandmaster at chess than an amateur swimmer has to beat an Olympic swimmer in a swim race.

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MonRoi

On October 15, 2010, 15 Denton HS students, chess club sponsor Fred Mueller, math teacher Joe Rozell, and I went on a field trip to The University of Texas at Dallas. We got to meet the chess team, tour the library and campus, eat a snack, have a chess lesson from our tour guide National Master Artur Safin, and play chess for fun. The photo is of the DHS students posing with one of UTD’s Grandmaster team members, Alejandro Ramirez Alvarez (seated), and Safin (far right).

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MonRoi

 On October 9, 2010, Denton High School freshman William Root won a $500 college scholarship for winning the high school open section of the Scott Watson Memorial Chess Tournament, held at Jack E. Singley Academy (Irving ISD). Root is Secretary of the Denton High School Chess Club, coached by Dr. Alexey Root (parent volunteer) and sponsored by math teacher Fred Mueller. News coverage of Root's victory is in the Denton Record-Chronicle (In the Schools section, page 4A, October 13, 2010), on the Denton ISD's Web site, on the Denton HS Web site, and as part of the National Chess Day Roundup on Chess Life Online. Alexey Root is also writing a follow up article for the December 2010 issue of Chess Life for Kids.

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MonRoi

I spent the afternoon of October 7 and the morning of October 8 talking about my books to educators, librarians, administrators, and counselors at Encyclo-Media. Sales were brisk, so I got to autograph many books! After I left the ABC-Clio/Libraries Unlimited Booth at Encyclo-Media, I drove to Denton, Texas to volunteer at the Denton High School chess club from 4-5 p.m. Today the students played a ladder game. 21 students attended; more information is at the Denton High School Web site (go to Activities, then to Chess Club).

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MonRoi

On page 9 of People, Places, Checkmates: Teaching Social Studies with Chess is a chart of basic checkmates (endgames). For chess club on October 1, 2010, I had one student teach K and Q vs. K, another teach K and R vs. K and a third teach K and P vs. K and force promotion to a R or Q. When each teacher had trained another student sufficiently well to take over his teaching job, the teacher moved on to teach a harder checkmate on the chart. For more details about today’s meeting of the Denton High School chess club see the meeting minutes.

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MonRoi

For September 24, 2010, chess club participants analyzed the ladder games that they played on the previous Friday. Since there were several people attending on the 24th that were not present on the 17th, they were spectators for the post mortems of the ladder games. For guidance, students followed post mortem guidelines from pages 5-7 of People, Places, Checkmates: Teaching Social Studies with Chess. For even more information about how to analyze chess games and post mortems, see chapter 4 (Write Like a Grandmaster) in Read, Write, Checkmate: Enrich Literacy with Chess Activities.

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