2022-2023 GoFundMe for the ChessKidz

How would your children like to participate in some chess classes and chess tournaments with no cost to you?

ChessKidz GoFundMe Project

Please spread the word on the current GoFundMe project for ChessKidz children programs. Covid put a big damper on the projects, but chess will continue with your help. Simply share this with your social media, friends and local businesses. We need to create a buzz to go viral!

ChessKidz Community Support GoFundMe Campaign

COVID-19 and the ChessKidz

We recognize the difficulty that parents and kids are experiencing in the wake of COVID-19. Schools and businesses across the country are closed, and there are even restrictions on public parks and other fun venues for kids which makes it difficult for them to keep in touch with their peers or just run out a bit of that seemingly endless energy. Fun activities for kids seem to be in short supply. We have the solution to childhood boredom during the COVID-19 public health crisis.

Is your kids' boredom putting you in a testy mood? Don't be like mad panda...

We Have A Solution!

Boredom is now an epidemic, but we are offering a fun solution for kids while maintaining a stimulating and educational environment. This solution is also open to our current students during this troublesome time. The best part? There is no risk to health!

We Have Expanded Our Services

ChessKidz is a 501c3 nonprofit organization with two branches in the United States, one in Reno, Nevada, and one in Austin, Texas. For over 15 years, our organization has offered chess lessons to kids via the public school system using public school facilities in the communities we serve. However, we are excited to announce that we recently launched our services online! Yes, you read that right! We are bringing chess to kids nationwide through our brand new online program.

This new program will allow us to fulfill our mission to promote chess as a technique for lifelong learning and it will help us to help young people realize that:

When kids learn how to play chess, the benefits are almost limitless. It’s like pull-ups, but for your brain.

Benefits of Chess

Chess instruction prepares kids for STEM education (science, technology, engineering, and math), and it increases reading scores.

Chess is an ancient and friendly game that teaches peaceful conflict resolution, critical thinking, and increases spatial awareness among many other proven benefits. Because of this, we made our services more accessible to kids across the country.

We offer real-time lessons with a live coach and use a child-safe platform that allows the class to play against each other online while receiving expert guidance.

Who Says Staying Home Has To Be Boring?

Signing up is easy! Visit www.chesskidz.org and register for an account. Once you have created an account on our website, there are multiple packages to choose from and they are even more affordable than our in-school lessons!

You will want to sign-up for the Silver Membership level or above to access our Chess Club Live program. However, time is running out for sign-ups so make sure you reserve your child’s spot today!

Wait, There's More!

ChessKidz is also offering a gift! We are giving away this beginner's eBook as a gift until June 1, 2020! This little eBook is a brilliant way to get kids started on learning how to play chess.

You can download the booklet below and kids with a silver level membership can start playing chess live on our website and receive expert weekly instruction! We hope you all enjoy this amazing gift and find value in our online services.

no longer available

Please email us at chesskidz@chesskidz.org if you have questions or you just want to tell us how amazing our new program is!



Are you feeling generous? Please take a peek at our Community Support & Child Outreach Fund on GoFundMe for Charity and share it with your friends!

2018 ISOFM Chess tournament and Summer camp

Welcome back to the one day chess tournament event. This year we have a new venue, the ChessKidz club! Please join us this year for the In Search of Future Masters tournament at the club. Other schedules and events are in the making. Keep up to date by visiting the calendar often - https://www.chesskidz.org/events/

ISOFM provides the very best way to gauge the level of the students who are part of the after school program as well as offers the opportunity to hone the skills of competition. Again, this is a non-elimination chess tournament. Participants will receive wristbands, scorebooks, pencils, pin and USCF membership renewal. This year we have decided that the winners of the scholastic section 1 and 2 will be offered free entry into the Nationals! - https://www.chesskidz.org/tournament-camp#tournaments

Summer camp is also announced for June 11-22! This is also hosted at the ChessKidz club; we hope to see you there! https://www.chesskidz.org/tournament-camp#tournaments - https://www.chesskidz.org/tournament-camp/#chesscamp

Come see the new venue and get ready for much more chess in Reno 🙂

Yours truly in chess,

ChessCoach Vernon

PDF FLYER, please share

2017 ISOFM Chess tournament and Summer Camp

We are really looking forward to seeing everyone again at Brookfield school. This year we have scheduled the year end tournament for June 10 and it is now a one day event.

This event provides the very best way to gauge the level of the students who are part of the after school program as well as offers the opportunity to hone the skills of competition. Again it is a non-elimination tournament for trophies!

Participants will receive wristbands, scorebooks, pencils, pin, USCF membership renewal and a chance to win a huge trophy! This year we have decided that the winners of the scholastic section 1 and 2 will be offered some travel expenses and free entry into the Nevada State Championship next year in Las Vegas!

This is of course a big deal 🙂 I really hope to see you there!

Please allow me to also invite your children to our chess summer camp at the University. We have offered two sessions that will begin the week directly following the last day of school for the public schools' balanced calendar.

Here we will study chess in depth and play quite alot. Tournaments each day with a mix of videos will keep us sharp in tactics and strategy.

The QUADZ weekly chess tournament will be running as much as possible in preparation for these events. If anyone needs to shake off the dust, let me know and I can send you the details.

Yours truly in chess,

ChessCoach Vernon

PDF FLYER, please share

2016 ISOFM Chess tournament and Summer camp

ChessKidz is proud to announce that the In Search of Future Masters tournament has been organized for June 3 and 4 at Brookfield School.

This is an event that is open to all the students in the Reno/Sparks area and may even see some participation from children from neighboring states.

It is a non-elimination tournament and features awards for individual and team achievements. The trophies are as big as a preschooler!

Everyone who participates gets a United States Chess Federation membership good for a year, a chess pin, wristband and scorebook.

Chess tournaments are held on almost every single weekend throughout the country and an event like ours has a value of over $130-$200. Our entry fee this year is only $25 thanks to a grant provided by DEW Foundation. Because of this, there are 200 sponsored spots available for this price!

Other tournaments require the kids and parents to provide their own chess clocks, boards, pieces, scorebooks and USCF annual memberships. There is no other single tournament in the entire country who is providing what we are bringing to this tournament. We want to make it as easy as possible for the kids to come and experience chess here in local Nevada.

Please share this with everyone you know. We hope for a very successful, exciting and fun event for the children.

ISOFM tournament flyer

PDF FLYER, please share

Famous Chess Quotes

“When you see a good move, look for a better one”
(Emanuel Lasker)

“The Pin is mightier than the sword”
(Fred Reinfeld)

“We cannot resist the fascination of sacrifice, since a passion for sacrifices is part of a Chessplayer's nature”
(Rudolf Spielman)

“All I want to do, ever, is just play Chess”
(Bobby Fischer)

“A win by an unsound combination, however showy, fills me with artistic horror”
(Wilhelm Steinitz)

“Strategy requires thought, tactics require observation”
(Max Euwe)

“I don't believe in psychology. I believe in good moves”
(Bobby Fischer)

“Modern Chess is too much concerned with things like Pawn structure. Forget it, Checkmate ends the game”
(Nigel Short)

“Life is a kind of Chess, with struggle, competition, good and ill events”
(Benjamin Franklin)

“I give 98 percent of my mental energy to Chess. Others give only 2 percent”
(Bobby Fischer)

“Chess is no whit inferior to the violin, and we have a large number of professional violinists”
(Mikhail Botvinnik)

“Only the player with the initiative has the right to attack”
(Wilhelm Steinitz)

“The winner of the game is the player who makes the next-to-last mistake”
(Savielly Tartakover)

“Your body has to be in top condition. Your Chess deteriorates as your body does. You can't separate body from mind”
(Bobby Fischer)

“Of Chess it has been said that life is not long enough for it, but that is the fault of life, not Chess”
(William Ewart Napier)

“Life is like a game of Chess, changing with each move”
(Chinese proverb)

“You cannot play at Chess if you are kind-hearted”
(French Proverb)

“The Pawns are the soul of the game”
(Francois Andre Danican Philidor)

“In order to improve your game, you must study the endgame before everything else, for whereas the endings can be studied and mastered by themselves, the middle game and the opening must be studied in relation to the endgame”
(Jose Raul Capablanca)

“Chess is mental torture”
(Garry Kasparov)

“Play the opening like a book, the middle game like a magician, and the endgame like a machine”
(Spielmann)

A new ChessKidz look

As our first recent blog post we at ChessKidz believe that it would be fitting to announce that DEW Foundation made it possible for this amazing new website. We want to say thank you very much for helping us further the mission of promoting chess as a technique for lifelong learning!

They have done this by updating one of the most important technological mediums allowing us to stay in contact with everyone involved. Thank you for the updated website!!

For more information on DEW Foundation and their mission, please visit www.dewfoundation.org

Also, thanks to Tango Studios www.tangostudios.com who designed & developed the new website.

This site provides a much cleaner and organized experience than before. Please feel free to click away and enjoy browsing to find out more about our organization.

Some Benefits of Chess

Life-skills Learned from a Game: Children enjoy their leisure time with activities that are easily available. Teachers, parents, and other family influences encourage children to participate in programs that provide benefits to his or her learning and development. So what kind of activity is easily available and provides developmental benefits? The answer is chess! Chess is multi-faceted in helping children learn life-skills. Many of the key effects of playing chess should be analyzed by anyone interested in helping youngsters learn more efficiently and enjoyably. Your findings will probably lead you to realize that children need solid pastimes in a world of Playstation and Nintendo.

Learning can be Fun: Ask any person who has a passion for a game if their pastime is enjoyable. Their answer will be “yes!” of course. However, chess is much different from just any game. Becoming involved in a chess game can increase the players IQ. Imagine the effect of children becoming seriously involved in games of chess repeatedly. They would naturally score higher on science, math, language, and many other tests. A case study that was conducted using chess teachers in elementary schools realized that “the patterning among the three groups of scores on the various tests, made at the beginning and end of the study period, point to positive changes with regard to ‘comprehension’ and ‘arithmetic’ skills in the ‘chess coaching’ group.” (Forest, Davidson, Shucksmith, and Glendinning, 2005, p.52).

A surprising benefit is that young people who play chess learn at an accelerated rate and may not have any idea that learning is one of the benefits of playing. He or she may simply be trying to have fun, which comes naturally for a child who sits down to enjoy a game. Some youngsters play for the feel of the heavy weighted chess piece in their small hand, ready to wage large-scale war on an eight-by-eight chessboard, never realizing that life-skills will be enhanced during this time of battle against an opponent. In effect, he or she becomes more open to learning new subjects, and retains an open mind concerning the learning process. However, this is not the only effect that chess has on children.

Concentration: Being very competitive, some children are willing to concentrate very hard to win a game of chess. The ability to calculate the possible outcomes is learned with experience over the game board, and this will help children deal with the consequences of their actions. One researcher explains, “Clearly, one crucial lesson all young people must learn is to think before they act. Chess teaches this skill in an authentic way: every move in chess has consequences, and successful players must learn to anticipate these consequences many moves in advance. An opponent’s expected response is what guides the player’s decision to make or avoid a certain move” (Kennedy, 2004).

Imagine a child who is putting fervent effort into beating an adult opponent. He is concentrating, his eyes are wide, and he is intent on winning – checkmate! The child is victorious. This young person would have learned that concentration and focus directly relate to winning and losing. He also would gain self-esteem having overcome an adult at “a game of wits”, as chess is often perceived to be. A victory like this enables a person to understand the true value in giving one’s full effort. This person can excel in elementary school as well as college using these skills, applying them to daily life while working with the people who they come into contact with.

Social Development: Chess is a very social game. It requires two people to sit and exchange moves over a chessboard and interact with each other physically, intellectually, and psychologically. This allows a player to make new friends who share a common interest. To interact efficiently, one might find the need to increase his or her vocabulary with chess terms or learn a new language entirely. Robert (Bobby) Fischer, 11th world chess champion, taught himself the Russian language to keep up-to-date with the latest chess theories at the age of 15. Though not all players would go to this extreme to interact socially, the chess player is more likely than the non-player to be involved in clubs and social activities. The smell of the vinyl chessboard, the sound of the ticking chess clock, the sight of the different types of chessmen are all senses that are shared by the chess players and inspire them to play. Children are mesmerized by the ancient game and are willing to harness the skills needed to succeed at it. Success is important for young people because they grow up to become adults with careers and lives of their own.

Career and Life: Each adult can remember the key activities that helped them learn the skills that they possess today. Would you have liked to learn chess as a child? Can you see the benefits that chess can instill as a learning device? The child who enjoys learning, can concentrate well and has outstanding social skills will become a very prosperous adult. Career wise, they can finish school achieving high scores on exams, graduate with a degree, and move on to starting a career which they will find fulfilling. "Chess-play assists the learning of 'how to learn' and creates a desire, alongside increased motivation and the will to use knowledge'. This initiative has made a significant difference to classroom life, family circumstances and community development." (Aberdeen City Council, 2005) The child that learned chess will see the win or lose effect in life because the chess player is very good at setting goals. Therefore, he or she will work hard to fulfill the necessary tasks to reach the plotted goals in career and education. The minds of those who play chess can focus in on life like the tuning of binoculars to see a far away object. It is our job to help children pick up these life-skills and use them.

Conclusion: Making educated choices on what activities should be supported in the community is easier when you weigh the benefits that are offered against the costs. There is little to no cost in allowing, supporting and promoting this intellectual activity within the community. Chess offers a vast assortment of effects, all of which can contribute to a skilled and developed person. Would you like to enable children to become better learners? Whether you are a teacher, parent, principal, or any other person who has the possibility of influencing the learning process, keep the benefits of chess in mind when you are looking for an activity to present to youngsters.

References:
Aberdeen City Council (2005). Huge benefits for young chess players. Retrieved August
26, 2005, from the Chess Scotland website:
http://www.chessscotland.com/archives/abcity2005.htm
Forest, D., Davidson, I., Shucksmith, J., and Glendinning, T. (January 2005). Chess
development in Aberdeens’s primary schools: A study of literacy and social capital,
48-52. Retrieved August 26, 2005, from the Scottish Executive Research website:
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Research/Research/14478/21999
Kennedy, Mark (August, 2004). More than a game, eight transition lessons chess teaches,
¶7. Retrieved August 26, 2005, from Cyc-Online website:
http://www.cyc-net.org/cyc-online/cycol-0804-chess.html.

Learn to Lose Well

I recently read an old book titled Bringing Out the Best in People by Alan Loy McGinnis and it made me think a lot about what motivated me to want to spend a lifetime digging into analysis and research on a topic so obscure as chess. Being that I am a student and practitioner of business management, I was cruising along enjoying a book on how to better motivate people around me and my eyes were immediately halted from coasting mode when I saw the word chess. The paragraph that engulfed my attention is the following:

“Watch to see where a child’s innate skills or talents lie… then gently lead or coax him or her into those areas. It may be difficult for a father who was a crack athlete to understand a son who would rather play chess than football. But chess, not football, is what such a boy needs if confidence is to grow in him. If he does one thing well he will come to believe that he can do other things well.”

The last sentence reminded me that the main motivating factor avalanching into the force that drives my subsistence is the belief that I can accomplish goals that I set for myself. If you find that you can do something and that the result is better than satisfactory, you may be inclined to give your best effort for other tasks. When I found that one of my favorite things in the world is to play a game of chess well, I found that it was also possible to finish high school and move on to higher education with decent grades. Goal after goal has been set and attained and the inspiration to live life better was found in a complicated game designed to exercise the mind.

Another very interesting section of the book discusses the art of failure. Recently I examined this same issue in another book titled What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 by Tina Seelig. I had never considered the power that failure can have on a person or questioned what drives someone to seek more punishment with another failure before smashing through the barricades on the path to success until these two books had maneuvered their way into my library. Some people get a taste of failure and choose paths in life to avoid the possibility of future failures as much as possible. On the other hand, some of the most successful people have actively sought the paths that are difficult, failed to reach their goal, learned from their mistakes and eventually trudged onward to the spotlight of victory and triumph. It all depends on attitude and the ability to cope with failure. This short video on success through failure gives some examples of success in the bay area by startups and internet companies.

The truth is that failures make us much stronger in so many ways. It can help us sharpen a skill, teach us the importance of determination or make us reminiscent of some needed humility. The best advice that chess coaches give on a regular basis is to analyze ones games to clear up any incorrect thinking or blunders to help refrain from future failures and chess players experience failure on a constant basis! In business, life or chess, will you flee from past and possible failure or will you show good will for the learning process by learning from your mistakes with the intent to accumulate and realize more failures? One of my favorite quotes comes from Vinnie in the movie Searching for Bobby Fischer “He didn't teach you how to win, he taught you how not to lose. That's nothing to be proud of. You're playing not to lose, Josh. You've got to risk losing. You've got to risk everything. You've got to go to the edge of defeat. That's where you want to be, boy - on the edge of defeat.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnZObWCz0as&hl=en_US&fs=1&]

A Master’s Drive

In December of 2004 I had the pleasure of teaching a winter-break chess program at the Saint John’s Presbyterian Church in San Francisco for two weeks. During this time is when I met Nicholas Nip who became the youngest USCF Master in history shortly after in 2008. I remember thinking about how intently he looked at the board with focus and patience and this is memorable because only very serious children have the traits to take chess so seriously as young as he was. Nicholas was 6 and approaching 7 years old during our lessons.

This recently brought up a question in my mind. How old do you have to be to guarantee your place in chess history? Nicholas made chess history by achieving the master title at the young age of 9 years and 11 months old beating out Hikaru Nakamura and Bobby Fischer’s records. Most of us will not have the chance to accomplish such a task and our future may seem a bit dimmer than that of young masters, but it is the passion to progress that drives each of us to pursue dreams. I now believe that it is very important to recognize talent at an early age, but the amount of time that one spends alive on the planet earth is not the only factor to achieving greatness. There is always the U.S. Championship and other spectacular events to claim your fame!

Hard work through the proper use of time management is one of the key factors to improving at chess. Some enthusiasts reflect on stories of the greats who studied for long hours of the day (Fischer – 14 hours or more) and learned the game at ripe ages of 3, 4 and 5 years old. The main point is that learning at an early age allows more time for accumulated knowledge over a larger span. It may be more natural to amass experience slowly over time, but I also believe that you can force feed it. Fischer had the benefit of learning young, but his relentless need to study would have carried him to top levels whether he learned at age 6 or 23. Children have the luxury to spend their spare time on things such as chess and adults may have less time, but depending on the environment surrounding someone who wants to excel, the person in question will shape their environment to meet their needs. If your need is to become a master of chess or anything else, I encourage you to continue shaping your surroundings and yourself to reach that goal!

As soon as the instructors of the Academic Chess Institute (an instructional program in California) recognized how strong Nicholas Nip was becoming at the game, they had to quickly find a titled player to provide grandmaster caliber tips and systems. This can become a key turning point in the life of a player. GM Boris Kreiman became young Nip’s coach. I asked him if this was a case of “Searching for Bobby Fischer” such as the story of Josh Waitzkin, not knowing that at one point Boris and Josh were archrivals at a young age! He replied that Waitzkin no longer played very much if at all and that Nicholas will be a very strong player in a short time. I find it interesting that Nip has not played a recorded USCF game in a over a year now since gaining the title, but I do know that he put in a lot of effort studying, more-so than many people are willing to. Most days I have the opportunity to learn from my students and them from me, and Nicholas gave me a great lesson. Continue to strive for what is important to you and never give up on your dreams.