Now that I have six different examples of a chess curriculum, it's time to compare them. That will be a separate exercise.
Following is an inventory of the documents identified in each of four previous posts, using the following structure:-
Title Author Number of pages Filename
Chess Curriculum (26 April 2015)
No.1: ChessKid.com Curriculum - Welcome & Introduction Daniel Rensch, Co-Director of Content and Professional Relations 12 pages (Introduction.pdf) ChessKid_Curriculum.zip (-> Directory:ChessKid_Curriculum -> 5 Subdirectories = 22 PDF documents)
No.2: Teaching Chess the Easy and Fun Way with Mini-Games Kathy Price, Andre E. Zupans 84 pages Randolph-TeachingChesstheEasyFunWaywithMiniGames.pdf
No.3: Think Like A King - A Curriculum Guide for Scholastic Chess David MacEnulty 21 pages school chess curriculum guide.pdf
Not mentioned in the original post:- Highland Park / PDF:-
No.4: CURRICULUM FOR BEGINNERS AND INTERMEDIATES, Highland Park Scholastic Chess Jerry Neugarten 36 pages HighlandParkCurriculum.pdf
[For further investigation:-
Chess Training Program for Teachers Susan Polgar 62 pages SPF_Training_Program_for_Teachers.pdf
Chess Lesson Plans for Teachers FIDE 6 pages chess_lesson_plans_for_teachers.pdf ]
S.Polgar Chess Curriculum (10 May 2015)
No.5: Chess Training Guide for Teachers and Parents Susan Polgar 65 pages chess-training-guide.pdf
FIDE Chess Curriculum (24 May 2015)
No.6: Kulac Teacher Guide Olgun Kulac 169 pages kutgen2014_03.pdf
No.7: ELEMENTARY LEVEL - CHESS CLASS BOOK Olgun Kulac 176 pages kuy1_2014_en.pdf
Chess Curriculum No.6 (07 June 2015; ChessCafe / ChessEDU)
No.8: ChessEdu.org - White Belt Chess Curriculum Mark C. Donlan 208 pages curriculum_wbv2.pdf
That makes four posts, seven (not six) resources, eight documents. What chess wisdom do the documents contain? I'll look at that in my next post.
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