The Hungarian Institute for Educational
Research and Development has released a supplement to the National
Curriculum, and made Judit Polgar’s ”Skill-building Chess” subject available for
elementary schools from September 2013.
The Judit Polgar Chess Foundation for
Educational Benefits has been working on the „Chess Palace” program for more
than a year, running pilot projects in several schools from September 2012. The
program proved to be very successful with children, teachers, parents and
educational professionals as well. From last September there has been a non-stop
interest from many other school in Hungary, and also many schools from several other
countries. Because of the
great interest in this initiative, the Foundation regularly holds open lessons
to demonstrate the methodology to teachers and professionals interested in
introducing the subject at their own school.
Judit Polgar has also developed
an elementary student book and workbook series called “Chess
Palace” for 1-4 grade students. This, so far unique, teaching material, instead
of teaching chess as a sport and game the traditional way, goes beyond the
normal boarders of chess teaching, and focuses on improving academic skills,
logical, creative thinking and problem solving, preparing children to be able to
accept the challenges of the digital society they live in. The Chess
Palace series is supported by a teacher training, a very practical teachers’
guide book and also provides a detailed learning toolkit available even for
schools with very limited finances, so they can adopt the whole program
easily.
„I’m glad we were able to come up with this
extremely complex and well-structured program, and find the way to integrate
chess into public education in Hungary, as one of the first countries to do this
in Europe. In this project we use chess as an exceptional learning tool, and we
found the way to make strong connection with fundamental subject such as math,
reading and writing. We
managed to completely integrate our chess into the regular elementary school
curriculum. The winners
of tomorrow will be able to deliver smart strategic and creative thinking and
quick problem-solving, which can all be playfully imbibed by children through
chess.”- said Judit Polgar after the official announcement of the decision.
The
graphics and illustrations of the Chess Palace series have been created by
Judit’s sister, Sofia Polgar. The most obvious way to reach children in a digital
world is through their own digital devices, such as tablets and smart phones.
Judit Polgar has achieved this already, having launched her own chess
application called ChessPlayground as well.
CHESS IN SCHOOL SUPPORTED BY
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
The European Parliament adopted the
Written Declaration “Chess in School” in 2012. The EP’s declaration has an aim
to bring attention to chess as a teaching tool to schools because it directly
contributes to academic performance and makes kids smarter, more critical
thinker, better problem solver, and more independent decision maker while
enjoying themselves.
As a new step in the “Chess in
Education” efforts Judit Polgar, Garry Kasparov and President of the European
Chess Union, Silvio Danailov has recently met the EU Commissioner for Education,
Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, Mrs. Androulla Vassiliou, in
Brussels.
During the meeting Mrs. Vassiliou
expressed her satisfaction with the big progress of the European Chess Union
concerning the project “Chess in school” and the big support which the Written
Declaration had received by the MEPs in the EU Parliament.

1 comment:
Kasparov?
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