Chess in Schools

Submitted by billwall on Fri, 10/17/2008 at 12:37pm.

The Annenberg Foundation is one of the biggest contributors to chess in America’s public schools.  The same foundation that sponsors the Annenberg Challenge that Barack Obama and Bill Ayers are linked to (Chicago Annenberg Challenge) also sponsors many chess activities in the schools.

 In New York, the Annenberg Foundation gave $200,000 to implement the in-school weekly program in eight New York City schools as part of the Chess-In-The-Schools (CIS) program.  Since 1986, Chess-in-the-Schools, a non-profit organization, have touched 400,000 students in the New York City public schools.  In 2007, 20,000 students were involved in the Chess-in-the-Schools program.  In 2008, Chess-in-the-Schools raised over $1 million to support chess in New York schools.

 The Manhattan School for Children is an Annenberg Challenge School and an Annenberg New York City Partnership for the Arts School.  One of its clubs it sponsors and supports is the American Chess Foundation Chess Club.

 The Annenberg Foundation donates to the Philadelphia Scholastic Chess League, comprised of 24 high school teams from around the city.  The Philadelphia Scholastic Chess League has 220 active chess clubs with 3,000 participants playing weekly.

 The Annenberg foundation provided financial assistance to the HEAF (Harlem Educational Activities Fund) chess club in Harlem, located at the Police Athletic League/Phipps Center.

 In Chicago, the Chess Academy is an approved on-site after-school enrichment provider for Chicago Public Schools.  It is an approved Professional Development Provider by the Illinois State Department of Education.  Also in Chicago, the Renaissance Chess Foundation works with the Chicago’s Mayor’s Office of Special Events to provide chess activities at community events.  The also act as a consultant to the Chicago Public Schools Chess Programs.

 Last year, the Department of Education invested $120,000 for chess in 100 public schools and expanded this fall to 100 more.

 The United States Chess Federation estimates 500,000 students in the public school system are being taught some aspect of chess.

 America’s Foundation for Chess (AF4C) has developed a program called First Move.  It is being taught in 26 states.  It uses chess as a learning tool to teach higher level thinking skills, advanced math and reading skills.  It also uses chess to build self-esteem in students.

 In Washington State, King County (Seattle) provided $25,000 to fully fund the AF4C First Move chess curriculum in 2nd and 3rd grade classrooms.

 In Philadelphia, the 7th largest school system in the country, 18 of the 280 public schools have added the AF4C First Move chess program to their curriculum.  Additionally, the Philadelphia Eagles NFL football league has made a commitment to chess in the Philadelphia schools as part of its Eagles Youth Partnership After-Schools Activities Partnership (ASAP) program.

 The Maryland State Department of Education granted $10,000 to 24 public schools to support a Chess in Maryland Schools (CMS) program.

 In 2007, the University of Aberdeen sponsored a Chess in the Schools and Communities International Conference (CISCCON).

 In the UK, the British Schools Chess Championship has been held every year since 1958.  At its height in the 1970s, over 1,000 teams took part.  In 2008, there were 135 teams.  In 2007, there were only 93 teams, the lowest ever.

 In Detroit, the Michigan First Credit Union (formerly the Detroit Teachers Credit Union) has donated $20,000 to chess in the Detroit Public Schools.  The Detroit public schools have produced several national scholastic chess champions.

 In Baltimore, about 1,200 students are playing chess in 60 public schools as part of the Baltimore Kids Chess League, which started four years ago with 20 schools.  The effort is sponsored by the Abell Foundation and the Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth.  Each school gets about $2,000 in grants to support chess.

 In California, the Berkeley Chess School (BCS) will offer chess free of charge to 500 children from Oakland’s underserved public elementary schools.  The BCS Oakland Chess Program will provide weekly classes to 500 3rd-thru-5th graders from five low-income schools in Oakland.  Sponsors include the Hellman Family Foundation and a grant from the Irene S. Scully Family Foundation.

 In October, 2008, elementary school children in the USA are playing a chess match with astronaut Greg Chamitoff, who is on the International Space Station.

 An unfortunate incident occurred in the Washington, D.C. public school system.  $73,000 was donated to support chess in the public schools.  However, a school business manager ripped off most of the money.  He used the school’s ATM card more than 100 times to steal from the public school chess fund.

 

» posted in Scholastics
 

Comments:

by fischeryouth - 2 days ago
Autorive France
Member Since: Apr 2008
Member Points: 51

this was helpful for a school project Cool

by Pinoy - 16 days ago
San Nicolas Ilocos Norte Philippines
Member Since: Dec 2008
Member Points: 75

There is a chess club in my school and about 30-40 members. I will join next school year. They play once or twice a week and just held a tournament for all students at my school.

by ChessGod - 24 days ago
kentucky United States
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 184

Wish my school would pick up the memo, me and my brother are really the only ones in school other than maybe one person, that really cares about chess.  I love chess and am currently the number one sophmore player in state, not that my school would care.  I go to a local chess club that consists of about 4-5 people that meet every tuesday, yeah 5 people care about chess in our town lol.

by staggerlee - 2 months ago
Kansas United States
Member Since: Mar 2008
Member Points: 514

I wish there had been chess programs in my schools.  I'm currently a tutor working with middle school kids and I'm trying to get a chess club started for them. 

by Jippo - 2 months ago
Riga Latvia
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 99

> Research studies have indicated that students playing chess have improved problem solving and math skills...

This fact is not a proof that those students have their skill due to chess, as hinted here. More probably students that are more inclined to problem solving (rather thinking than memorizing) are keen on chess (challenged by chess) more often than students from other "group". Students that don't like to think or don't like solving they don't like chess as well.

by billwall - 2 months ago
Palm Bay, FL United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 2100

Chess requires problem solving. Math requires problem solving.  A good problem solver should mean that you will do better in math. Chess requires using your mind, thinking ahead, planning, being systematic, and determining the outcomes of certain moves. Chess is just not a bunch of moves being memorized.  Weakness in math usuallt comes from an over emphasis on memory skills instead of thinking skills. Research studies have indicated that students playing chess have improved problem solving and math skills over the group that have not been involved in the playing of chess. Ollie LaFreniere, the Washington Chess Federation's statewide Coordinator for Scholastic Chess, said in a Seattle Post-Intelligencer interview, "Chess is the single most powerful educational tool we have at the moment, and many school administrators are realizing that."

The late Faneuil Adams (president of the American Chess Foundation (ACF). believed that chess could enhance learning, especially for the disadvantaged. He founded the Chess in Schools Program, which initially began in New York's Harlem School district. Early in the program, the focus was on improving math skills for kids through improved critical thinking and problem solving skills using chess. Test scores improved by 17.3% for students regularly engaged in chess classes, compared with only 4.56% for children participating in other forms of enriched activities.

by sopansadat - 2 months ago
DHAKA Bangladesh
Member Since: Aug 2008
Member Points: 2048

I agree.

by figrock - 2 months ago
United States
Member Since: Jul 2008
Member Points: 1004

Bill, It's been proven that studying chess an hour or so a day has actually increased a person's math and reading scores, right?

 

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