Playing games and solving tactics is pretty much covering everything. You can give this a shot for endgame study.
http://www.chess.com/article/view/video-series-on-king-and-pawn-endings
Playing games and solving tactics is pretty much covering everything. You can give this a shot for endgame study.
http://www.chess.com/article/view/video-series-on-king-and-pawn-endings
Looks like you're doing just fine already. Â The one thing I'd do differently is maybe take NM aw-rats's advice a little more seriously (since you already belong to his group) and play a few more correspondence games ("online"). I see that you're already playing slow chess which is great, but correspondence games allow even deeper thought. Â Essentially you get to analyze your game while you're playing as well as after. Â Well, you've already watched his videos I'm sure, and he does a better job of explaining than I can, although I'm not sure you have to spend several hours on every move. Â Chess Mentor is a very efficient tool to study with although it's important to go back and review the lessons. Â Some of the early courses don't give you much feedback, but almost all of the later ones do. Â
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As a player who is relatively new to chess (I have been playing for a year a bit)I have been wondering what sort of material I should be studying to make efficent progress, without devoting huge amounts of time. Could anyone advise me in the right direction. Currently my study involves playing lots of games and a little bit of chess tactics.