13 Apr '07 08:22>
What are your favourite Chess Training Exercises? I just found out about the "Stoyko Exercise" which sounds doable and interesting.
What else?
What else?
Originally posted by sydsadI like Silman's exercise of playing through GM games with trying to guess one player's move each time, and then seeing if you were right, trying to figure out why, and then making the response and repeating.
What are your favourite Chess Training Exercises? I just found out about the "Stoyko Exercise" which sounds doable and interesting.
What else?
Originally posted by UmbrageOfSnowThats not Silman's idea...its how many people have been learning for a long time...a lot of these new books and 'new' training methods are just old methods reworded in a way to make you think you are on to something new that will make you a master..all just a way for the author to get you to buy his books
I like Silman's exercise of playing through GM games with trying to guess one player's move each time, and then seeing if you were right, trying to figure out why, and then making the response and repeating.
Originally posted by onyx2006I didn't say it wouldn't help...the fact of the matter there is enough chess books out there that there isn't a need for anymore along the lines of chess training...yet people keep writing them and doing their best to make you think its some new secret of chess revealed...when in fact all they are doing is taking old methods and using them to make money...Silman isnt doing anything that original in his books but yet people gobble them down because they think they are learning something new...its just people falling for his marketing
Silman does recommend playing through master games & guessing moves, and it 'is' a good thing, and 'does' help improve your chess.
Originally posted by PatzergrlThats an interesting rant. However the reason Silman's books are good is because they explain things clearly and in a manner that makes it interesting to read. In short, he is a good writer while many other "chess authors" have great understanding but lack the skills to communicate that understanding.
I didn't say it wouldn't help...the fact of the matter there is enough chess books out there that there isn't a need for anymore along the lines of chess training...yet people keep writing them and doing their best to make you think its some new secret of chess revealed...when in fact all they are doing is taking old methods and using them to make money... ...[text shortened]... ecause they think they are learning something new...its just people falling for his marketing
Originally posted by zebanoanyone who's ever studied in a university knows exactly what that means. usually even the most brilliant scholars are just completely useless at teaching. good teachers are few and far between.
Thats an interesting rant. However the reason Silman's books are good is because they explain things clearly and in a manner that makes it interesting to read. In short, he is a good writer while many other "chess authors" have great understanding but lack the skills to communicate that understanding.
Originally posted by PatzergrlAnd there's nothing really wrong with what Mr. Silman did, as long as he created something of value in the book and didn't claim that the study of master games was an original idea.
Thats not Silman's idea...its how many people have been learning for a long time...a lot of these new books and 'new' training methods are just old methods reworded in a way to make you think you are on to something new that will make you a master..all just a way for the author to get you to buy his books
Originally posted by sydsadIf I understand the Stoyko exercise, you choose a middlegame position from a GM game and write down everything about it. You also evaluate all potential lines. The point being to then compare your evaluations with those of a master. Will fritz suffice, or does the computer evaluate things to differently than a human does?
What are your favourite Chess Training Exercises? I just found out about the "Stoyko Exercise" which sounds doable and interesting.
What else?