Will memorizing a mountain of related chess positions help you to learn?
Have you spent untold time studying a chess idea and then found that you
can't remember it in a game? Education research, says Kevin Cripe, has
found that optimal learning is based largely on the structure of problem
sets and your brain's ability to understand similarities and
differences. In The Learning Spiral, the author contends that you will
actually absorb the game's concepts faster with seemingly random but
carefully selected puzzles than with traditional, step-by-step teaching
techniques. The key is that this is closer to real-life chess play,
where nobody tells you the "theme" of the position in front of you. With
twenty-five years' experience getting underprivileged kids to achieve
beyond all expectations, Cripe now takes his holistic instructional
methods to the chess arena. Designed for both chess novices and their
coaches, The Learning Spiral sets out the theory, explains how it works,
and then applies it with more than 400 positions for the student to
solve. So go ahead, analyze, differentiate and improve quickly!