Chess making comeback in U.S. schools
By Jillian Berman, USA TODAY
USA Today
May 14, 2009

Getting a group of third, fourth and fifth graders to sit quietly is considered by some to be an impossible task. But all Ross Pancoast has to do to get his class of about 20 students at Beverly Farms Elementary School in Potomac, Md., to focus is set up a few chess boards.

Once he brings out the clocks, black and white pieces, and score sheets, the typical classroom commotion turns to silence.

Pancoast, who teaches chess before and after school at about nine schools in Montgomery County Md., says he’s seen a “resurgence” of the game in the school system.

And it’s not just a local phenomenon. Over the past few years scholastic chess, or chess for educational purposes, has taken U.S. schools by storm.

“We’re seeing more of these (chess programs) across the country, especially as more and more educators are seeing the impact of the chess program on their students,” says Jerry Nash, scholastic director of the U.S. Chess Federation.

This increased interest can be seen in the number of young people competing in chess at high levels. This week the nation’s top chess players are gathering in St. Louis to compete in the “Super Bowl” of chess — the U.S. Chess Championship. Of the 24 players vying for the $200,000 prize, four are under the age of 21, including 14-year-old Ray Robson of Largo, Fla., the youngest player in the competition.

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