America's Foundation for Chess

America's Foundation for Chess
Formation June 2000 (2000-06)
Founder Erik Anderson, Laurie and Scott Oki, Yasser Seirawan
Type Non-profit
Legal status Foundation
Purpose Chess education
Headquarters Bellevue, Washington, USA
Coordinates 47°38′28″N 122°11′31″W / 47.641°N 122.192°W / 47.641; -122.192Coordinates: 47°38′28″N 122°11′31″W / 47.641°N 122.192°W / 47.641; -122.192
Affiliations United States Chess Federation
Website 1stmove.org
Formerly called
Seattle Chess Foundation

America's Foundation for Chess (AF4C) is a nonprofit chess foundation begun in greater Seattle, Washington, USA in 2000.[1]

Scott Oki and Laurie Oki founded Seattle Chess Foundation in June, 2000,[2][3] which later became America's Foundation for Chess. Entrepreneur Erik Anderson and grandmaster Yasser Seirawan are also credited as founders of America's Foundation for Chess.[4][5]

The foundation was originally based at Carillon Point, in suburban Kirkland, Washington,[6] and moved to Bellevue in 2013.[7]

AF4C sponsored the U.S. Chess Championship starting in 1999.[5]

First Move

The foundations's First Move curriculum uses chess as a learning tool in second and third grade classrooms to teach critical and creative thinking skills and improve overall academic achievement. First Move is taught one hour per week, over the course of the school year. The Chess Lady teaches the curriculum via streaming video, classroom teachers facilitate the activities and can learn with their students. In 2014-15 the program will serve about 140,000 students across the United States and a few schools internationally.

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. McClain 2005.
  2. Tice 2002.
  3. Kaech 2003.
  4. Forbes 2013.
  5. 1 2 Ramirez 2000.
  6. Christensen 2007.
  7. "Good news: First Move is growing!", Official blog, America's Foundation for Chess, September 11, 2013, retrieved 2013-12-09

References

External links

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