Saturday, October 20, 2007
Chess for Juniors
Chess for Juniors,  by Robert M. Snyder, covers basic and intermediate chess concepts for  young people.  We are using the book with our 6yo dd, who started  learning chess when she was 4 or 5.  She’s been reading kids chess books  since she learned to read over a year ago, and she’s been playing chess  against the computer for over a year as well.  However, I am not  qualified to teach her anything more than just how the pieces move, and  without instruction she becomes discouraged as the computer repeatedly  wins their games because she is not using strategy.  So we bought this  book to work through together so that she would have a better foundation  in chess.  I am working through it with her, about one chapter or half  of a chapter each week.  We get the chess board out so that we can set  it up to match the illustrations in the book.  So far (we are just on  chapter 6), I have found the presentation very clear and easy to follow,  and the topics move slowly enough for us without being plodding.  The  book covers the very basics, such as how each piece moves, as well as  more advanced topics such as specific openings to learn and employ.
Labels:
book review,
homeschooling
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