Opening Principles:
1. Control the center squares – d4-e4-d5-e5
2. Develop your minor pieces toward the center – piece activity is the key
3. Castle
4. Connect your rooks
Tactics...tactics...tactics...
Pre Move Checklist:
1. Make sure all your pieces are safe.
2. Look for forcing move: Checks, captures, threats. You want to look at ALL forcing moves (even the bad ones) this will force you look at, and see the entire board.
3. If there are no forcing moves, you then want to remove any of your opponent’s pieces from your side of the board.
4. If your opponent doesn’t have any of his pieces on your side of the board, then you want to improve the position of your least active piece.
5. After each move by your opponent, ask yourself: "What is my opponent trying to do?"
Middlegame Planning:
1. Expand your position:
a. Gain more space.
b. Improve the position of your pieces.
2. Decide on what side of the board to play.
a. Queenside: a-c files.
b. Center: d-e files.
c. Kingside: f-h files.
Compare, space, material, and weakness(es)
Play where you have the advantage.
3. DO NOT HURRY. Regroup your pieces, and be patient.
A close friend opened up a local chess club designed to teach chess to kids ages 8-12, he is now moving up in life and has handed the reigns off to me. Im basically an average player and have sat at around a 1200 rating for the past month or so. I'm looking for studyguides, books, anything of that sort to help me teach more intermediate concepts.
The kids in this chess club understand basic concepts such as what piece moves where, center control, castling, en passant, and basic openings. What more can i teach them? How do I open them up to more intermediate concepts, and in the future more advanced concepts (such as how to handle the endgame).