Click (Susan Polgar SPICE chess training guide) to download your FREE copy of Chess Training Guide for Parents and Teachers (Over 600,000 copies have been downloaded and distributed worldwide).
FREE chess training guide for parents and teachers via Webster University: http://www.webster.edu/documents/spice/chess-training-guide.pdf
One of the most common questions I face as a chess coach is what are some of the basic chess rules every novice player must know. Here is my recommendation:
Susan Polgar Power Principles of Chess
1. Control the Center!
The center of the board includes the squares e4, d4, e5, and d5. When you start a game, place your pawns in the center to occupy and control as many of these squares as you can. Location, location, location!
2. Develop Your Pieces as Soon as Possible!
Get your Knights and Bishops out right away. This should be done before you try to checkmate your opponent, some time in the first 6 or 7 moves if possible.
3. Castle as Soon as Possible!
Castle at the very first chance you have in order to keep your king safe. Remember, you can’t win if your king isn’t safe and you get checkmated first. So don’t forget to castle! Then after you castle, connect your rooks by developing your queen.
4. Keep Your Pieces Protected!
Don’t leave your pieces hanging without protection. Each and every piece you have is very valuable, so don’t forget to protect them. Protecting means if your opponent can take your piece, then you can take your opponent’s piece.
5. Have Fun and Win with Grace, Lose with Dignity!
This is my motto in chess. First and foremost, chess should be fun. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose, it’s all part of the game. When you win, be a good sport and don’t trash talk or make fun of your opponent. When you lose, be an even better sport and not a sore loser. Shake hands and congratulate your opponent. This will go a long way toward making good friends.
For young players under the age of 10, I recommend Learn Chess in 30 Minutes DVD as well as the book A World Champion’s Guide To Chess (www.chessmaterials.com).
Recommended First Book: A World Champion’s Guide To Chess
I just received the first shipment of the new version of my best selling chess book A World Champion’s Guide to Chess. This book is aimed for beginners/novice players. It is a perfect book for parents / teachers to teach youngsters how to play chess.
The best-selling A World Champion’s Guide to Chess is available again!! Winning Chess the Polgar Way!
http://www.amazon.com/World-Champions-Guide-Chess
In A World Champion’s Guide to Chess, Women’s World Champion Susan Polgar’s exclusive training methods will have you playing winning chess! Topics include Chess Essentials, Tactics, Strategy, Pattern Recognition, Endgames, Chess Etiquette, Advice for Parents & Coaches and much more! SUSAN POLGAR is a winner of four Women’s World Championships and the top-ranked woman chess player in the United States. She became the #1 woman player in the world at 15 and remained in the top 3 for over 20 years. In 2013, she received the U.S. Coach of the Year Award and the following year, she was named the Chess Trainer of the Year by the International Chess Federation (FIDE). She thus became the first person in history to be accorded both honors. Under her guidance, SPICE chess teams at both Texas Tech University and Webster University have won a combined six consecutive National Division I Collegiate Chess Championships.
PAUL TRUONG is winner of eleven national titles, a prolific chess trainer, and award-winning chess author. He was also captain and manager of the historic 2004 US Women’s Olympiad team which won two gold and two silver medals, as well as the coach of the six-time national champion SPICE chess teams.
Some of the reviews:
By Michael P. Sullivan on September 17
First let me tell you what this book is not. It is not designed to teach you the movements of the pieces. Ms Polgar does cover the material, but dedicates only about 2 pages per piece. This is enough for adults or teenagers, but not enough for children. It does not spend much time on strategy or openings. It focuses on tactics.
I am a chess coach for an elementary school and find that focusing on tactics is probably the most important area for a beginning to intermediate player. More and more research shows that while openings and traps can have a short term boost in winning games, the best way to become a strong player is tactics. I’ve seen numerous beginning books, but this by far is the most important chess book that I know of for players that have learned “at home” or already know how the pieces move. As of this writing, when I lookup “chess” on Amazon, I see over 62000 results. This is my favorite book for teaching chess.
This book is easy to use and easy to read. It introduces a tactic (such as pins) with a paragraph or two and then jumps right into exercises. The exercises themselves start easy and get tougher farther along. It is also one of the few chess books that is easy to reuse (Ms. Polgar recommends going through the exercises again and improving speed.) Ms Polgar is not only a GrandMaster, but she has been focused on teaching the game. This book is an excellent product and shows how good she is at teaching chess.
I don’t think this is the only chess book you need when learning the game, just the most important.
By Rich Jackson on February 4, 2006
Format: Paperback
By Brad Ashlock on July 20, 2005
By Andrew on February 5, 2006
By Chess Dad 2005 on May 11, 2005
‘Practice’ before you ‘Play’
This book teaches the game in small steps, such as how to checkmate if you have specific pieces, how to avoid a loss by using perpetual checks etc.
This book helped me in developing a “radar system” that scans for various parameters such as identify the vulnerable pieces, finding the pins and at the same time protecting your pieces from opponent’s attack.
I have taken a printout of dos and don’ts section and keep it with me while practicing with my chess simulator program.
I feel confident with basics and ready to read advanced material.
Great book for beginners. I give 5/5.
I know almost nothing about chess. I suppose a very lucky head of cabbage might mate me in 6 moves (leaving me to make excuses). I don’t care about chess. No one will ever pay me a dime to play chess. I do have the sort of mind that is attracted by that sort of geometric strategy game. I wanted a book that would give me quick insight into how “real” chess players might think. I wanted a book that would let me think in a new way—as an exercise—and to see patterns that I missed before.
This is just a splendid book. There aren’t thousands of self-serving pages saying how great Ms. Polgar is (she probably is great—I wouldn’t know a grandmaster from a lucky head of cabbage). There aren’t tens of pages of motivational drivel. It’s short, it’s to the point. It has CONTENT. It’s all about real chess, and it’s written in chess language. It doesn’t waste any time, and it lets me learn by doing. It is as good as having a decent teacher around to show me how it’s really done.
I don’t think it would be possible to serve the vast mass of unwashed and uncultured boors—like myself—in any kinder or better way. We get to see how the real people play chess and think about it. Does that mean we get to see everything and all the issues and all their subtleties? No, how could that be possible. But we can go from zero knowledge and zero sophistication and zero chess to at least having some appreciation of that way of thinking.
In the end, the person with the most mental flexibility in their whole life—in all the ways they have to think about any situation—that person wins life, not just chess.
More reviews here: http://www.amazon.com/World-Champions-Guide-Chess-Step
Learn Chess the Right Way!: Book 1: Must-know Checkmates
Learn Chess the Right Way!: Book 1: Must-know Checkmates – May 23, 2016
http://smile.amazon.com/Learn-Chess-Right-Way-Checkmates
by
Learn Chess the Right Way is a five-volume chess puzzle book series aimed at the novice, beginner and intermediate level player, using the unique methods of the award-winning coach and former world champion Susan Polgar. It introduces the most important checkmate and material-winning tactics, as well as defensive techniques to the new chess player. Each of the five volumes will consist of 500 puzzles.
In Book 1, the focus is on one-move checkmate exercises. In each of the first five chapters, a specific piece delivers checkmate (in Chapter 1: the queen, Chapter 2: the rook, and so on). In Chapters 6-8, checkmates which involve special tactics (such as pins, discovered attacks, etc.) are introduced. Chapter 9 has a mixed collection of puzzles, without any hint about which piece is to deliver checkmate. Chapter 10 builds on the previous 9 chapters, and introduces basic patterns of checkmate in two moves.
With over 40 years of experience as a world-class player and coach, international grandmaster Susan Polgar has developed the most effective way to help young players and beginners Learn Chess the Right Way. Let her show you the way to understanding the most common and critical patterns and let her show you the way to becoming a better player.
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