Showing posts with label UIL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UIL. Show all posts

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Chess Will Be A Competitive Event At LISD Schools



Chess Will Be A Competitive Event At LISD Schools

By: Brooke Thomas
CBS - TV / Lubbock, TX

Chess will now be a new competitive event at LISD schools

Its part of a partnership between the University Scholastic League and Texas Tech.

2nd through 8th grade students all across the state will compete in 30 minute chess competitions in the form of an exam.

They'll solve chess puzzles designed by chess Grandmaster Susan Polgar.

The first students to correctly solve 20 puzzles before the time runs out will win the competition.

"It teaches students responsibility. There's all sorts of the positive things that chess can do. This not only helps students but it also helps teachers in our schools," said Lynn Elms, Texas Tech Division of Institutional Diversity.

The chess program is the first competition Texas Tech has ever proposed to UIL.

The first event will be in January.

Source: http://everythinglubbock.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

UIL Invitational Chess Puzzle Solving


Saturday, September 24, 2011 at the Science Spectrum

Sections: K-3, 4-5, 6-8, 9-12 Grades

Entry fee is only $5!

On-site registration: 9:00 am-12:15 pm | Competition: 12:30 pm-1:00 pm

Awesome chess prizes for the winners in each section!

Info: SPICE 806-742-7742 or email SPICE@ttu.edu

Please register and send Entry Blank and Fees to TTU-SPICE send to: SPICE Box 45080 Lubbock, TX 79409-5080.

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Entry Form 9-24-11- UIL: Please PRINT all information and make check/money order to TTU-SPICE

Name: ____________________ Phone: (_____) _______School___________
Address: _______________________ City/State: __________ Zip:_________
Email: ________________________ DOB: __________Section___________

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

UIL Invitational - Chess Puzzle Solving


UIL Invitational - Chess Puzzle Solving

Saturday, September 24, 2011
at the Science Spectrum

Sections: K-3, 4-5, 6-8, 9-12 Grades

Entry fee is only $5!

On-site registration: 9:00 am-12:15 pm | Competition: 12:30 pm-1:00 pm

Awesome chess prizes for the winners in each section!

Info: SPICE 806-742-7742 or email SPICE@ttu.edu

Please register at www.spice.ttu.edu (and then click on Events on the left hand side) or send Entry Blank and Fees

to TTU-SPICE send to: SPICE Box 45080 Lubbock, TX 79409-5080.

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Entry Form 9-24-11- UIL: Please PRINT all information and make check/money order to TTU-SPICE.

Name: _____________________ Phone: (_____) _________School____________
Address: ___________________ City/State: _____________ Zip:___________
Email: ______________________________ DOB: _________Section___________

Saturday, January 22, 2011

A+ Chess Puzzle (Pilot)


A+ Chess Puzzle (Pilot)

A+ Chess Puzzle (Pilot) is for Pilot Event -->

The UIL Legislative Council has authorized a pilot event in Chess Puzzle solving for the A+ Academic program.

What is a pilot event?

Pilot status allows a new event to be adopted essentially on a trial basis. Contest rules for pilot events are NOT included in the Constitution & Contest Rules, so they may be adjusted on an ongoing basis during the pilot period. The current A+ Social Studies event spent three years in pilot status before the Council voted to adopt it as an official UIL event. Pilot events may or may not ultimately become official events.

What is Chess Puzzle solving?

The benefits of chess are well documented for players of all ages, and especially for young people. Chess teaches problem solving, hones concentration and encourages analytical and strategic thinking. Chess can be a lifelong pursuit.

Chess puzzle competition is very different from tournament chess play. Contestants in a chess puzzle contest receive a paper-and-pencil test that includes a series of chess boards with pieces in particular positions. The contestant must then determine the fewest moves to checkmate given that particular board layout. Time is also a factor - contestants are scored based on the most puzzles solved in the least amount of time. See below for a sample test.

A chess puzzle event provides an avenue for chess participation that does not require the time and resources of actual tournament play. The fixed time limit makes it practical to include in a district meet schedule, and the availability of free resources allows any school (including those that do not currently have chess programs) to include chess puzzle in their slate of A+ events at minimal cost.

Download a sample chess puzzle test with answer sheet and key.

Where did this idea come from?

The proposal for a UIL chess puzzle competition came from the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE), a division of Texas Tech University. Ms. Polgar is one of the world's leading chess players. She is currently the top-ranked woman player in the United States, and she was the first woman ever to earn the title of chess Grandmaster. Coming soon - read more about Susan Polgar and the chess puzzle pilot in the Leaguer.

How do we participate?

Districts with upcoming meets will be contacted about possible participation in the pilot this spring. All A+ districts will have the option to participate in 2011-12 by indicating their choice on the District Meet form.

Are there invitational meets?

Yes. SPICE and school district partners are sponsoring multiple invitational meets around the state, including the following:

January 22 - Alice
January 22 - Lubbock
January 29 - Brownsville
February 19 - Lubbock

Additional meet information will be added when available.

What study and practice resources are available?

There are thousands of chess web sites available online, many that include chess puzzles, and many that are designed for kids. Below are links for some of these sites; more will be added.

Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (includes a daily chess puzzle and downloadable training guide for teachers and parents)
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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

First ever UIL Chess Competition


First ever UIL Chess Competition

Texas Tech and the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence invite K-12 students to take part in the first ever historic UIL (University Interscholastic League) Invitational in Chess Puzzle Solving on Jan. 22 at the Science Spectrum.

There will be four grade sections:

K-3
4-5
6-8
9-12

Entry fee is only $5!

Onsite registration: 11:30 am-12:15 pm; Competition: 12:30 pm-1:00 pm.

There will be awesome chess prizes for the winners in each section!

For information, please call 806-742-7742 or email SPICE@ttu.edu.
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Monday, December 13, 2010

Texas Tech, LISD look to add SPICE to UIL


Texas Tech, LISD look to add SPICE to UIL
Last Update: 10:47 pm

Texas Tech and the Lubbock Independent School District are plotting to pilot a new statewide UIL competition.

The program was proposed by Texas Tech's Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence, known as "SPICE."

Now it's a UIL competition.

Next year , Lubbock elementary and middle school students will be given 30 minutes to solve 20 chess puzzles designed by Grandmaster Polgar.

Vice President for Institutional Diversity at Texas Tech, Juan Munoz, said, "It teaches critical thinking, planning, strategizing. It teaches patience, focus, mathematical computation. One has to estimate the number of moves to achieve a certain objective. So there are a number of academically transferable skills in chess."

Munoz says Chess has such wide appeal because anyone can play anywhere, adding that he hopes the UIL level competition will spark students' interest in Texas Tech.

Source: http://www.myfoxlubbock.com
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Historic chess initiative in Texas


Texas Tech University and SPICE officially launched the UIL Chess Puzzle Solving Statewide Pilot in the state of Texas earlier today at Wester Elementary School in Lubbock, Texas. UIL is the largest interschool organization of its kind in the world!

More than 300 students, teachers, parents, administrators, and various media, etc. were on hand for the launching of this historic competition.

This will potentially provide excellent opportunities for millions of chess playing students in the entire state of Texas to compete and earn scholarships for years to come. This is the first time that Chess has been accepted as an UIL Competition in its 101 year history!

"The seeds of the UIL were planted in 1904, when Dr. S.E. Mezes, president of UT, decided the state's foremost university needed to be of service to the entire state.... Since 1910, the records and achievements of state high school participants have justified the decision of the University to support this program of public school service. The UIL has grown into the largest interschool organization of its kind in the world, and is the envy of similar groups nationwide. The UIL exists to provide educational extracurricular academic, athletic, and music contests. So successful is the program that one of every two high school seniors has participated in a UIL event prior to graduation. The initials "UIL" have come to represent quality educational competition, administered by school people on an amateur and equitable basis." (Official UIL Info)
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Friday, December 10, 2010

Texas Tech, SPICE Introduces Old Game to Young Players


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DATE: Dec. 10, 2010
CONTACT: Karin Slyker, karin.slyker@ttu.edu
(806) 742-2136

Texas Tech, SPICE Introduces Old Game to Young Players

WHAT: Texas Tech University announces a state pilot program for students of Lubbock Independent School District.

WHEN: 1 p.m. Monday (Dec. 13)

WHERE: Wester Elementary, 4602 Chicago Ave.

EVENT: Chess will be the subject of a University Interscholastic League (UIL) competition next year for elementary and middle school students. The pilot program was proposed by the Texas Tech Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE), part of the Division of Institutional Diversity, Equity and Community Engagement.

The competition will be in the format of solving chess puzzles designed by Grandmaster Polgar. Competing students in grades two through eight will have 20 puzzles to solve in 30 minutes.

Elementary school students will choose their answers from mostly multiple choice questions in which white can checkmate black in one move, while older students will have puzzles that are checkmates in one or two moves.

According to Lynn Elms, the regional director for UIL, the pilot chess program is a historic moment for Texas Tech, which has a 75-year association with UIL. This is the first competition that Texas Tech has proposed.

Find Texas Tech news, experts and story ideas at www.media.ttu.edu.

CONTACT: Paul Truong, director of marketing, SPICE, Texas Tech University, (806) 742-7742 or paul.truong@ttu.edu.
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Saturday, November 13, 2010

A Tech-proposed UIL chess puzzle-solving competition to be statewide pilot program


A Tech-proposed UIL chess puzzle-solving competition to be statewide pilot program
Posted: November 13, 2010 - 12:11am
By Joe Gulick
Avalanche-Journal

Chess, one of the most competitive games in the world, will be the subject of a University Interscholastic League competition next year for elementary and middle school students in a pilot program proposed by Texas Tech and designed by Susan Polgar, Tech’s chess grandmaster.

The competition will not involve actual games of chess but solving chess puzzles designed by Polgar, who is the founder of the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE) at Tech.

Students in grades 2 through 8 will have 20 puzzles to solve in a 30-minute period, Polgar said.

“Every single move in chess is problem-solving,” she said. “Each move is a new problem to solve.”

Polgar and Lynn Elms, the UIL regional director, noted the pilot program is a historic moment for Texas Tech, which has been associated with UIL for at least 75 years.

“This is the first competition that Texas Tech has ever proposed. We are pleased Susan and something as exciting as chess is involved,” Elms said.

The Chess Puzzle Solving competition will be presented in diagrams similar to the ones that appear in Polgar’s weekly Avalanche-Journal column, but the puzzles will be ones designed for younger players, Polgar said.

The elementary students will choose from multiple choice answers in which white can checkmate black in one move. Older students will have some puzzles that are checkmates in one move and others that are checkmates in two moves.

“I believe chess can help children improve their thinking skills in general. It can help their discipline and improve their self-confidence. Chess is a wonderful tool in building relationships,” Polgar said.

Last January, Polgar presented the proposal to the UIL State Legislative Council in Austin. That resulted in a mini-pilot program this year in Lubbock, Laredo and Corpus Christi.

The UIL Legislative Council in October determined Chess Puzzle Solving would next be a statewide pilot program, which means all schools will have the opportunity to compete, said Elms. All of the Houston schools have committed to the competition, and they are expecting good participation from other schools in the state, she said.

If it is successful, the pilot program could become an annual UIL event by September 2012, Elms said, and they are also hopeful Chess Puzzle Solving competitions for high school students would be added later.

College scholarships for skilled chess players are available, Elms said.

“It can be a way for kids to get more dollars to come to school — to compete in college. But that’s way down the road. We have to take care of second through eighth grades first,” Elms said.

Chess is a natural subject for competition among students because it is a great educational tool and an equalizer, Polgar said.

“In chess, children are forced to think before they act,” she said.

The game is also an inexpensive activity, Polgar said. Rather than activities that require expensive equipment or musical instruments, chess can be played on a very modestly priced set.

Source: Avalanche Journal
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