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Boy Scout Troop 358 Featured Merit Badge |
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Our featured merit badge
this month is Chess. This merit badge is a brand new badge released by the
BSA in September 2011. While earning this merit badge, Scouts can learn about
the history of chess, how to set up he board, and several strategies used in
the game. Chess merit badge is an elective and can be earned to complete a
Scout’s minimum requirement of 21 merit badges. Requirements 1.
Discuss with your
merit badge counselor the history of the game of chess. Explain why it is
considered a game of planning and strategy. 2.
Discuss with your
merit badge counselor the following: a.
The benefits of
playing chess, including developing critical thinking skills, concentration
skills, and decision-making skills, and how these skills can help you in
other areas of your life b.
Sportsmanship and
chess etiquette 3.
Demonstrate to your
counselor that you know each of the following. Then, using Scouting's
Teaching EDGE, teach the following to a Scout who does not know how to play
chess: a.
The name of each
chess piece b.
How to set up a
chessboard c.
How each chess
piece moves, including castling and en passant captures 4.
Do the following: a.
Demonstrate
scorekeeping using the algebraic system of chess notation. b.
Discuss the
differences between the opening, the middle game, and the endgame. c.
Explain four
opening principles. d.
Explain the four
rules for castling. e.
On a chessboard,
demonstrate a "scholar's mate" and a "fool's mate." f.
Demonstrate on a
chessboard four ways a chess game can end in a draw. 5.
Do the following: a.
Explain four of the
following elements of chess strategy: exploiting weaknesses, force, king
safety, pawn structure, space, tempo, time. b.
Explain any five of
these chess tactics: clearance sacrifice, decoy, discovered attack, double
attack, fork, interposing, overloading, overprotecting, pin,
remove the defender, skewer, zwischenzug. c.
Set up a chessboard
with the white king on e1, the white rooks on a1
and h1, and the black king on e5. With White to
move first, demonstrate how to force checkmate on the black king. d.
Set up and solve
five direct-mate problems provided by your merit badge counselor. 6.
Do ONE of the
following: a.
Play at least three
games of chess with other Scouts and/or your merit badge counselor. Replay
the games from your score sheets and discuss with your counselor how you
might have played each game differently. b.
Play in a
scholastic (youth) chess tournament and use your score sheets from that
tournament to replay your games with your merit badge counselor. Discuss with
your counselor how you might have played each game differently. c.
Organize and run a
chess tournament with at least four players, plus you. Have each competitor
play at least two games. |
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