The Texas Chess Association (TCA) is sponsoring a one-day TCA Chess in Education workshop from 10:30-4:30 on the Saturday (March 17, 2007) of the State Scholastic chess tournament at the Adam's Mark Hotel Dallas. The workshop has a lunch break from 12:00-1:00, and refreshments from 3-3:30. The workshop registration fee is $15 in advance; $20 at the door.
Send advance registration fee to:
TCA Treasurer
Barb Swafford
2709 Longhorn Trl
Crowley, TX 76036-4719
214-533-0061
roundsie1@dot11net.net
The workshop fee includes refreshments from 3-3:30, but participants are on
their own for lunch.
The TCA workshop will highlight current thinking in chess in education to
encourage the growth of chess in K-12 schools. Participants will learn about the
TCA and about the benefits of chess in the classroom, especially for
gifted-and-talented students. The workshop will offer professional development
clock hours from the Texas Association for the Gifted and Talented (TAGT)
http://www.txgifted.org/.
PRESENTERS:
10:30-11:00 a.m. Dr. Alexey Root,
author of Children and
Chess: A Guide for Educators, will discuss her book and the
online
courses for educators offered by the University of Texas at
Dallas (UTD). Root will show how chess instruction tied to academic subject
matter enhances the cognitive and affective functioning of gifted students.
(TAGT 5.0)
11:00-11:30 a.m. Dr. Tim Redman,
editor of Chess and Education: Selected Essays from the Koltanowski
Conference and professor at UTD, will
discuss approaches for educating and involving parents, the community, and other
professionals in supporting chess instruction for all students and in particular
gifted and talented students. (TAGT 3.0)
11:30-noon Former Chess Online student
Leah Dagher, Houston ISD full-time teacher of chess (Briarmeadow Charter
School), shares her unit for grades 5-8 The Science of Chess. This unit
correlates elements of chess to basic theories introduced in classroom science
studies, and includes adaptations for gifted learners. (TAGT 5.0)
1-2 p.m. Dr. Steve Lipschultz,
Think Like a King® School Chess Software
System, will demonstrate how this software allows educators to establish
successful chess programs at a single school or throughtout a school district.
The software addresses management as well as motivational issues, and includes a
fully interactive, comprehensive scholastic chess curriculum that allows anyone
to successfully mentor a chess program. Think Like A King utilizes a variety of
instructional strategies, and is adaptable to gifted-and-talented and regular
education students. (TAGT 4.0)
2-2:30 p.m. Clemente Rendon, TCA
Vice President, describes the programs and initiatives developed by TCA for K-12
students. Chess tournaments, college scholarships, and grants for talented chess
players—all of interest to gifted students (and their parents and teachers)—will
be emphasized. (TAGT 5.0)
2:30-3:00 p.m. Daa Mahowald (BS
Math Ed, MA Ed Psych), who has taught scholastic chess for over twenty years,
will present several chess mini-games and discuss how their use can enhance the
cognitive and affective functioning of regular and gifted students. (TAGT
4.0)
3:30-4:00 p.m. Former Chess online
student Jody Braswell, 3rd grade GT Cluster teacher for the Ector County
Independent School District in Odessa, TX, will explain how chess can be
integrated into multiple content areas, and how it can be used to differentiate
curriculum. (TAGT 5.0)
4:00-4:30 p.m. Martha Jenkinson and
Jeff Ashton, of the Chess Program at the
T.H. Rogers gifted-and-talented
magnet school in Houston ,
will discuss building a strong school-based chess program and how chess is part
of the differentiated curriculum. For example, all gifted-and-talented students
in grades K-3 receive chess instruction once a week during the school day.
(TAGT 5.0)
News Release: Texas Chess Association, January 8, 2007
Contact:
Dr. Alexey Root, 940-484-2265.