ABOUT CHESSKIDS ACADEMY

chessKIDS academy offers online interactive lessons, quizzes and games for kids, five chess computers for you to play, and a resource center for parents and teachers of kids who play, or would like to play, chess, including a scholastic chess download pack to enable any school to run a chess club.

At present there is no specific charge but we encourage users to make a donation. I have put a lot of time and effort into the site, and there are also costs associated with running it such as hosting and domain fees, so anything you contribute will help developing the site as well as promoting chess for kids.

The site is best viewed using IE6 or Firefox. Most of the site will also work under Netscape 6, but not everything works under Netscape 4. To make full use of the site you will also need JavaScript, Java and cookies enabled. You will also need the ChessBase Habsburg Diagram Font (permission to download granted by ChessBase gmbh) to use some of the material in the Scholastic Download Pack. We now have a complete three-year interactive chess schools which can be used in schools, ideally with the aid of an interactive whiteboard, or for parents and children to learn together at home.

We are also working on an extensive series of quizzes, drills and worksheets to complement the online lessons. Keep watching for the latest news.

Our philosophy that chess is NOT a kids' game, but a game for adults which some children can excel at. We are unhappy about what currently happens in schools, where children are encouraged to learn the moves but are provided with no further instruction, and no indication that further instruction will be beneficial. While children who learn in such an environment will gain some short-term enjoyment and, perhaps, some limited educational benefit from the game, what they will NOT gain is a life-long interest.

The skills children need to go beyond playing at a low level are skills that children usually develop at about 11 or 12: complex logical thought and the ability to study on your own. If children can be encouraged to develop these skills using a game they enjoy playing then the potential benefit is enormous.

For more information on this subject click here.

Parents and teachers: we appreciate emails to let us know what you think about the site, but can't promise to reply to every message we receive.

We will always consider link exchanges with other non-profit sites involved with chess. As we currently have a commercial deal with a leading supplier of chess goods working in both the US and the UK we cannot at present consider other similar deals or links.

We are always interested in discussing sponsorship deals or potential commercial applications using material from this site. Please email us if you're interested.

If you think you've found a mistake you may well be right! But first look at our help page for a possible solution to your problem. Please email me and let me know exactly what lesson, quiz or game you are viewing, exactly what is on the screen and exactly what the problem is and I will put it right as soon as I can.

Finally, we believe in the value of making children laugh at the same time as teaching them. If you don't share our sense of humor, sorry!

Webmaster:

Richard James
95 Lyndhurst Avenue
Whitton
Twickenham
TW2 6BH
United Kingdom

Phone: +44 (0)208 8898 0362



Richard James is the Director of Richmond Junior Chess Club, which he founded along with Mike Fox in 1975, and Chess Programme Manager of the Richmond Chess Initiative. He has been teaching chess to children since the early 1970s. Among his former pupils are Luke McShane, who won the World Under 10 Championship at the age of 8 and reached the position of 52nd in the world in July 2004, and 2004, 2005 and 2006 British Champion Jonathan Rowson. "Richard James ... introduced me to the possibility of improving by studying books as well as playing." He currently teaches at Richmond Junior Chess Club, at several schools, and coaches a number of private pupils. For information on chess teaching in the Richmond area by Richard and his colleagues please visit chessKIDS richmond.

He is the author of Move One, a chess course for children and various unpublished coaching books which are available here.

Together with Mike Fox he is the author of The Complete Chess Addict, The Even More Complete Chess Addict and the Addicts' Corner column which ran in CHESS Magazine for 16 years. He is also the webmaster of the Chess Addict website (not currently active).