Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

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  • Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

    Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

    March 24, 2017

    Chess program creates state-championship team in rural Mississippi

    The game of chess takes root in Franklin County, Mississippi, growing students' horizons and changing a whole community

    In rural Franklin County, Mississippi, just seven of the 93 high school graduates last year went on to a four-year college. But that number may rise dramatically over the next few years, thanks to a chess program that has broadened the outlooks of hundreds of school children, while lifting the hopes of their parents and community.

    Sharyn Alfonsi reports from Franklin County on the next edition of 60 Minutes Sunday, March 26 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

    In only a year-and-a-half, the chess program started in Franklin County by Dr. Jeff Bulington has turned out a state-champion chess team. It was a seminal moment when Franklin County dominated the state championships.

    “That was very sobering for them to suddenly realize ‘Wow, we are good.’” says Mitch Ham, a team member’s parent. “The realization of their own potential was a beautiful moment.”

    Some of the Franklin County grade schoolers out-played high schoolers in that statewide victory. They also overcame a stereotype. “People said country kids couldn’t learn chess,” says one of the players, Parker Wilkinson.

    Even some locals were skeptical. They weren’t sure their kids were natural chess players. Says Bulington, “I was asked...’do you think...these kids have it? Could you have a chess program here?’ And I was, ‘yeah, of course. They’re as smart as any other kids I’ve ever met.’” Bulington came from Memphis, Tennessee, where he had built a chess program for city kids. He was recruited by a benefactor who is paying his salary. The benefactor wishes to remain anonymous.

    “I feel like chess could take us anywhere. But it’s not about where it takes us, it’s about how far it takes us.”

    Just 7,000 reside in Franklin County in Mississippi’s southwest region. In a rural, poor county with two stoplights, some can’t see far beyond the county line. Chess is changing that, says Ham. “You always want to see your kids go further,” he tells Alfonsi. He sees the game, the competition, as a vehicle. “This gives them a window at a young age, that [says] ‘Hey, there’s a whole world out there. I don’t need to set my goals at making $8 an hour,’” says Ham. “’I need to set my goals at whatever I want them to be.’”

    Many of the students playing chess have gained a new confidence and seen a rise in their grades. Rebekah Griffin was in the fifth grade last year when she played in the state championships. “I didn’t really think about it until somebody told me, ‘You played a guy with a beard!’” Griffin is excited about her future. “I feel like chess could take us anywhere. But it’s not about where it takes us, it’s about how far it takes us.”

    Every chess player who spoke to 60 Minutes plans to attend college.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/chess-pr...l-mississippi/
    Last edited by Wayne Komer; Saturday, 25th March, 2017, 12:09 AM.

  • #2
    Re: Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

    I wonder if IM Dave Ross (formerly of Ottawa and Montreal - now living in Jackson, Mississippi) knows about this.

    According to the USCF rating list, Parker Wilkinson is in grade 6 with an 1124 rating. Recent results - he finished with 3.5/7 in the Grade 6 category of the National K-12 championships held in Nashville in December. 2.5/5 in the U1400 section of the New Orleans Open in December, and 2/5 in the U1500 section of the Memphis Candidates in January.
    There are several players from MS with a family name of Ham - all with unimpressive 3-digit ratings.
    Jeff Burlington has no USCF rating.

    Without a list of team members, it's hard to see if they "dominated the state championships".

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

      Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

      March 24, 2017

      The March Madness basketball tournament pushed this program back at least half an hour.

      A wealthy benefactor, who wishes to remain anonymous, lured Jeff Bulington (note the spelling of his name) and his chess skills to Franklin County. He had seen how Bulington molded chess champions in Memphis, and he hoped to see the same success brought to Mississippi. He thought maybe a dozen kids would be interested.

      A year-and-a-half later, Bulington, or “Dr. B” as he’s known in town, is now teaching hundreds of Franklin County kids, showing them so much more than chess.

      He is on the third year of a 10-year contract.

      The final test for the fifth and six graders was a tournament in Nashville lasting three days. In the first round the Franklin County players had lost 30 of 32 games. At the end of the tournament, the fifth-graders were number-8 in the country and the sixth were 10th.

      Additional coverage is on 60 Minutes Overtime at:

      http://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-ches...-a-poker-face/
      __________

      I think it is an interesting social and educational experiment. You have kids from a supposedly “backward” county in rural Mississippi and you give them first-class teaching, take them to tournaments and open up a chess centre and wait and see what happens.

      I don’t think ChessTalkers would have any doubt that the experiment would be successful.

      The children seemed bright and talkative and didn’t have what one might interpret as a “Southern” accent.

      Very uplifting.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

        Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

        March 24, 2017

        From the Chess Daily News May 5, 2016

        HISTORIC ACHIEVEMENT FOR YOUNG CHESS PLAYERS IN FRANKLIN COUNTY, MS
        By Randy Youngblood
        Franklin County Advocate

        Riley Middleton, a third grade student at Franklin Lower Elementary, rode with his mother. They followed a big yellow school bus from late afternoon well into the star-filled east Mississippi night of Friday, April 22. Riley and his mother were part of a caravan headed to the rolling hills of Starkville, to the sleepy campus of Mississippi State University, along with 61 members of Riley’s chess team. They were from even more -rural Franklin County (population 8000), which lies some 20 miles east of the historic Mississippi River town of Natchez. Although it was his first tournament, Riley returned to Bude the next day as the undefeated leader (5-0) of the Mississippi State Chess K-3 championship team from Franklin County Lower Elementary. His mom, Kim Middleton says Riley’s response to his success was simple and clear: “He says he loves chess and wants to play more.” Such a humble response from a Franklin County chess player is not surprising. They play to win, but for the intrinsic love of the game that has been fostered in them over the past eight months by their instructors, Dr. Jeff Bulington and Mr. Bobby Poole.

        Riley’s first place trophy is one of many captured by Franklin County players at Mississippi State University that day. Schools from around Mississippi fielded teams of four or more students in an effort to claim state championships in six categories: K-1, K-3, K-5, K-6. K-8, and K-12. Franklin County was competing there for the first time ever. At the end of the day, the chess tournament room in Colvard Hall erupted with cheers several times as FC claimed five of the six grade-level state championships. To top it all, Franklin County Upper Elementary—unleashing a feisty squad of 4th and 5th graders!—won the high school division, against far more experienced players from schools with long chess traditions.

        How could it be? Surely that was the question many teams from across the state were asking. When asked about the mercurial rise of FC chess, Jeff Bolhuis, Director of the MS State Scholastic Chess Association, had this to say, “It is a fantastic accomplishment to have 60+ players go from novice to tournament champion in a matter of months. A couple of folks in the Memphis area told me when Dr. B first became involved in Meadville that this was going to be a great program, but the speed and extent of the kids’ development has been amazing.” Bolhuis also noted that to his knowledge no elementary team had ever won the high school division. Jackson Prep previously had dominated the division for 12 of the past 14 years.

        Chess, never before formally taught or competitively played in Franklin County, has already impacted the lives of many children, parents, and educators in a profound way in these eight months. In June of 2015, Bobby Poole looked out his window to find a tall fellow from Memphis moving in next door. Fast forward to January of 2016. Mr. Poole retired from the Mississippi-based cell phone company CSpire and became an assistant chess coach, having become enmeshed in the chess program right from its inception. After Saturday’s successes he posted on Facebook, “This has been an unbelievable year so far. A year ago, I could never have believed that any of this would even be possible. Even when Dr. B told me it WAS going to happen, I had to trust that he knew what he was talking about because I had no point of reference. Obviously, he has been spot on in all of his assessments of our program, and today’s performance was absolutely no fluke.” Chris Kent, Interim Superintendent of Franklin County Schools and father of Zack Kent—a 4th grader who helped lead FC Upper Elementary to the state high school championship—said this: “I am so proud of the entire FC Chess Team. They have proved once again that students from Franklin County can compete with students from anywhere in the country.”

        Likewise, former World Champion Susan Polgar (whose introductory chess text lines the windows of the FC chess room and can now be found in homes across the county) shared these thoughts: “Congratulations to the all the young players in Franklin County for their remarkable success at the State Championships! Their incredible success further proves that when young people are being taught the right way, combined with hard work / dedication, in addition to the support from parents / teachers, success will happen at the highest level.

        https://chessdailynews.com/historic-...lin-county-ms/

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Chess on 60 Minutes, March 26, 2017

          Thanks for the spelling correction. The coach, Jeff Bulington (without the "r") has a USCF rating of 1610. Although inactive since 2003 (one event in 2011), he played a lot prior to 2003, and remains a USCF member.

          http://www.uschess.org/msa/MbrDtlTnmtHst.php?12578319

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