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     3 <!-- Mirrored from users.eniinternet.com/bradleym/NoAlt.html by HTTrack Website Copier/3.x [XR&CO'2014], Sun, 06 Nov 2022 06:49:33 GMT -->
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     4 <head>
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     5 <title></title>
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     6 </head>
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     7 <body text="#000000" link="#0000ff" vlink="#551a8b" alink="#ff0000" bgcolor="#c0c0c0">
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     8 <a name="There Is No Satisfactory Alternative T">
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     9 <p><strong><hr>
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    10 </strong>
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    11 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2">
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    12 <p><strong>There Is No Satisfactory Alternative To Go</strong>
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    13 
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    14 <p><strong>© 2002 Milton N. Bradley</a></strong>
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    15 
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    16 <p>As one of the world's great strategic board games, Chess shares certain important characteristics
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    17 with Go that also makes it a valuable pedagogical adjunct to the standard curriculum, and it has
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    18 often been used in that role outside the Orient in places where Go was unknown. As Shelby
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    19 Lyman noted in his nationally syndicated Chess column in Long Island's premiere newspaper
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    20 Newsday on Sept 10, 1991, "Chess works in an educational environment because ......it is a
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    21 sport....and it is played for fun." He continued "... children playing Chess engage their full
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    22 intellect, will and strength to a remarkable extent. They alertly attend the chessboard: observing,
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    23 remembering, generating ideas, testing those ideas, making decisions and mistakes and learning
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    24 from those mistakes." He concluded "Chess has an advantage over most school subjects: it
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    25 combines both theory and practice. Ideas are honed and tested in the crucible of competitive play.
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    26 Poor formulation or poor execution of ideas loses games. Careless, faulty thinking is ruthlessly
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    27 refuted on the chessboard." 
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    28 
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    29 <p>The validity of Lyman's contention that Chess can improve student performance was  recently
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    30 abundantly demonstrated in New York City's Mott Hall School, as reported by Brent Staples in
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    31 the Sunday New York Times of Dec 15, 2002, and described in considerable detail in the section
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    32 of this web page entitled "Teaching The New 'R' Of Reasoning".
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    33 
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    34 <p><em><strong>Go is far superior to Chess as a pedagogical tool because it not only fully shares <u>all</u> of these
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    35 considerable assets, but also possesses several others of transcendent importance that <u>Chess
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    36 lacks almost completely</u>:</strong></em>
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    37 
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    38 <p><UL type = disc>
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    39 
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    40 <p><LI> Most readily apparent is Go's far greater accessibility, especially by the very young. It is
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    41 free of all the artificial complexities (e.g. different piece moves, promotion, castling, en passant
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    42 capture, etc.) that beset Chess. The structure of Go is as simple and almost as easy to learn in
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    43 rudimentary fashion as Checkers, so it is possible for almost anyone to quickly and effortlessly
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    44 begin playing it. 
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    45 
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    46 <p><LI> The rigid starting setup of Chess vastly reduces the number of options available, thereby
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    47 inhibiting the free flow of the player's imagination. In contrast, <em>the Go board starts empty and
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    48 the players create their own unique structure in every game, thus allowing full reign to their
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    49 creativity and imagination.</em>
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    50 
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    51 <p><LI> The simplistic objective of Chess of catching the opposing King together with its small 8 x
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    52 8 square scale and constricting starting lineup lead to a "quick kill" mentality in which the
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    53 capture of some material or a successful "mating attack" on the opposing King can lead to an
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    54 instant win. The result is a game that is very strongly biased toward the tactical, with very little
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    55 opportunity for the development of much more than elemental strategy. In contrast, the 19 x 19
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    56 line Go board has enormous scale. Coupled with the need to trade off short term profits and their
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    57 costs against the possibility of later achieving greater long term gain, this leads to incredibly
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    58 profound strategy whose realization depends upon the precise execution of tactics every bit as
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    59 incisive as those of Chess. <em><strong>This gives Go an entire dimension for intellectual development
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    60 almost entirely lacking in Chess.</em></strong>
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    61 
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    62 <p><LI> Perhaps most important of all, the vast scale of the Go board makes it impossible to
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    63 precisely calculate anticipated outcomes during the crucial opening stages of the game, and this
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    64 requires the players to rely entirely upon general strategic principles and such right brain
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    65 functions as pattern recognition and "instinct". <em><strong>This integration of right and left brain function
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    66 provided by Go is crucial to the complete development of the brain, and is also almost
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    67 completely lacking in Chess (or any other known human activity).</em></strong>
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    68 
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    69 <p>This unique integration of left and right brain function in playing Go was recently directly
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    70 demonstrated for the first time by MRI brain scans, in experiments described in the report
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    71 referenced in the section of this web page "Comparison Between Chess and Go".
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    72 
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    73 <p></UL>
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    74 
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    75 <p>For these reasons, <em><strong>Go</em> not only provides <em>unlimited scope</em> for even the most brilliant to
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    76 exercise their mental capabilities to the fullest, but <em>an effectiveness in improving the brain
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    77 function and academic performance of even underachievers unmatched by any other known
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    78 pedagogical mechanism.</em></strong>
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    79 <a name="Caveats "></a>
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    80 <p><u><strong>Caveats</u></strong> 
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    81 
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    82 <p>There are some significant caveats that must be addressed in implementing a school Go program,
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    83 especially in the US:
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    84 
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    85 <p><UL type = disc>
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    86 
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    87 <p><LI>  Most important is the realization that <em>Go is not a form of magic wand</em>, despite the
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    88 enormous benefits that its participants ultimately enjoy. Mere brief exposure to the elegant basic
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    89 concepts of Go and occasional casual play may be pleasurable, but will <u>not</u> result in substantive
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    90 salutary changes in the student's thinking processes or study habits! 
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    91 
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    92 <p><em><strong>The benefits Go provides can <u>only</u> be achieved over a period of months and years during
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    93 which the student actively studies and plays Go, and progresses well into the advanced stages
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    94 of skill.</em> </strong>The reason is that a deep understanding of and ability to appropriately address the
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    95 complex interactions between Go's strategy, tactics, and elegant structural concepts are what
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    96 actually improve the student's intellectual capabilities. Coupled with Go's subtle development
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    97 and inculcation of improved study habits, this then translates into improved academic
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    98 performance.
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    99 
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   100 <p><LI>  It is this "rewiring" of the brain to enable it to efficiently engage in the kind of <em> advanced
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   101 REASONING</em> essential to both playing Go and solving real world problems that is most readily
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   102 accomplished at about age 4 or 5. As noted in some detail in the section of this web page
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   103 "Teaching The New 'R' Of Reasoning", the ideal learning method for such young children is
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   104 largely but not wholly informal, supplemented by a small irreducible minimum of formal
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   105 instruction. Unfortunately, the ideal combination of conditions to permit using this preferred
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   106 method does not routinely exist anywhere in the US today outside a very few Oriental
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   107 communities. Therefore there is no practical alternative to a more formal, intrinsically less
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   108 desirable (but still effective) approach.
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   109 
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   110 <p><LI>  In Japan, Go is a well established and highly respected cultural/social activity and almost
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   111 every child is already aware of its existence long before entering school, so participation in an in-school Go program is fairly readily obtained and accepted. In the US Go is almost completely
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   112 unknown to all but a few students of Oriental extraction. Far worse, in our basically anti-intellectual society, activities like playing Go are also often characterized by many students and
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   113 parents as "nerdy", and are viewed disapprovingly. Overcoming this erroneous negative
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   114 preconception may constitute a formidable challenge, at least until the program is well
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   115 established and its value demonstrated beyond question.
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   116 
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   117 <p></UL>
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   118 
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   119 <p><a href="SHUNTGO.html"><Font Color="#0033FF"><strong>Continue</strong></Font></a>
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   120 
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   121 <p>Click Here To Return To<a href="index.html"><Font Color="#0033FF"><strong> Milt's Go
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   122 Page</strong></Font></a>
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   123 
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   124 <p><hr>
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   125 
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   126 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2">
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   127 </body>
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   128 
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   129 <!-- Mirrored from users.eniinternet.com/bradleym/NoAlt.html by HTTrack Website Copier/3.x [XR&CO'2014], Sun, 06 Nov 2022 06:49:33 GMT -->
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   130 </html>
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