TY - JOUR
T1 - Stalemate? The complex relationship between educational chess and students’ skills
AU - Choi, Álvaro
AU - Hurtado, Marta
AU - Santín, Daniel
AU - Sicilia, Gabriela
AU - Simancas, Rosa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Over the last decade, an increasing number of countries have integrated chess as a pedagogical tool and even as core content of their academic curricula. Nonetheless, the evidence regarding the causal effects of chess on a range of skills remains inconclusive. We report new evidence of the impact of learning chess in school on a set of cognitive and non-cognitive skills of 12-year-old students to shed light on this matter. To do this, we take advantage of the implementation of a phase-in program introducing chess into a set of schools in Catalonia (Spain). This experimental setting enables us to estimate the causal effects of practicing educational chess at school on critical thinking, attention, patience, and risk aversion. Results show that, after one academic year, the differences between the treated and control group are not statistically significant for any of these outcomes. Students who took part in the chess program significantly outperformed the students in the control group only in terms of their chess-playing knowledge and proficiency.
AB - Over the last decade, an increasing number of countries have integrated chess as a pedagogical tool and even as core content of their academic curricula. Nonetheless, the evidence regarding the causal effects of chess on a range of skills remains inconclusive. We report new evidence of the impact of learning chess in school on a set of cognitive and non-cognitive skills of 12-year-old students to shed light on this matter. To do this, we take advantage of the implementation of a phase-in program introducing chess into a set of schools in Catalonia (Spain). This experimental setting enables us to estimate the causal effects of practicing educational chess at school on critical thinking, attention, patience, and risk aversion. Results show that, after one academic year, the differences between the treated and control group are not statistically significant for any of these outcomes. Students who took part in the chess program significantly outperformed the students in the control group only in terms of their chess-playing knowledge and proficiency.
KW - Chess
KW - Cognitive and non-cognitive skills
KW - Primary education
KW - Student evaluation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105000543868
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/a061c42e-b281-3e28-bc8e-2ad64e095e80/
U2 - 10.1016/j.tsc.2025.101819
DO - 10.1016/j.tsc.2025.101819
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000543868
SN - 1871-1871
VL - 57
JO - Thinking Skills and Creativity
JF - Thinking Skills and Creativity
M1 - 101819
ER -