β™ŸοΈ Intermediate Level

🎯 Who is this level for?

This level is suited for:

  • β€’Players who have mastered the basics and can play legal games without assistance.
  • β€’Students who understand common tactics like forks and pins but struggle to spot them consistently.
  • β€’Learners who have played several games and are beginning to think more seriously about improvement.
  • β€’Players who are familiar with simple openings but don't yet have a structured opening repertoire.

Skill Level: Intermediate

  • β€’48 Training Sessions
  • β€’Tactical Chess-Puzzles Solving Community Sessions
  • β€’Online Tournaments
  • β€’Detailed Study Material
  • β€’Class Summary And Feedback For Every Session
  • β€’Performance Analysis And Tracking

🎯 WHAT'S INCLUDED IN THE 48 SESSIONS

  • πŸ“48 PRACTICE ASSIGNMENTS (ONE AFTER EVERY SESSION)
  • 🧩6 STRUCTURED TESTS TO CHECK PROGRESS
  • πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§6 PARENT–TEACHER MEETINGS TO REVIEW LEARNING
  • πŸ“‘6 DETAILED PROGRESS REPORTS FOR PARENTS
  • πŸ“ŠONGOING PERFORMANCE TRACKING THROUGHOUT THE COURSE
  • πŸ…CERTIFICATE OF COMPLETION AT THE END OF THE COURSE
  • β™ŸREGULAR FRIENDLY TOURNAMENTS FOR PRACTICE

🧠 Learning Outcomes

Play consistent, principled openings and reach safe middlegames.
Recognize and use basic tactical patterns with greater accuracy.
Checkmate efficiently with common piece combinations.
Handle elementary endgames with confidence.
Think more proactively and reduce blunders.
Develop basic strategic plans, such as controlling the center or target pawns.

🧩 Suggested Activities

Practice Activities:

  • β€’Daily tactics training (on Lichess, Chess.com, or ChessKid)
  • β€’Playing longer time control games (15+10, 30 min) to build thinking discipline
  • β€’Solving endgame checkmate drills

Learning Resources:

  • β€’Studying annotated beginner games to see principles in action
  • β€’Reviewing own games (especially losses) to find repeated mistakes