Abstract

It has been proposed that playing chess enables children to improve their ability in mathematics. These claims have been recently evaluated in a meta-analysis (Sala & Gobet, 2016, Educational Research Review, 18, 46–57), which indicated a significant effect in favor of the groups playing chess. However, the meta-analysis also showed that most of the reviewed studies used a poor experimental design (in particular, they lacked an active control group). We ran two experiments that used a three-group design including both an active and a passive control group, with a focus on mathematical ability. In the first experiment (N = 233), a group of third and fourth graders was taught chess for 25 hours and tested on mathematical problem-solving tasks. Participants also filled in a questionnaire assessing their meta-cognitive ability for mathematics problems. The group playing chess was compared to an active control group (playing checkers) and a passive control group. The three groups showed no statistically significant difference in mathematical problem-solving or metacognitive abilities in the posttest. The second experiment (N = 52) broadly used the same design, but the Oriental game of Go replaced checkers in the active control group. While the chess-treated group and the passive control group slightly outperformed the active control group with mathematical problem solving, the differences were not statistically significant. No differences were found with respect to metacognitive ability. These results suggest that the effects (if any) of chess instruction, when rigorously tested, are modest and that such interventions should not replace the traditional curriculum in mathematics.

Highlights

  • It has been proposed that playing chess enables children to improve their ability in mathematics

  • One psychological mechanism has been regularly proposed for explaining the putative effects of chess instruction: Being a cognitively demanding activity, chess improves pupils’ domain-general cognitive abilities, abilities that transfer to other domains, and benefits a wide set of non-chessrelated skills (e.g., Bart, 2014)

  • The results showed no significant differences between the three groups in mathematical ability or metacognitive ability

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Summary

Participants

A total of 233 third and fourth graders from eight Italian schools took part in this experiment only. A 6-item test was designed to test the pupils’ mathematical ability (range score 0–6). The items used were all from the IEA-TIMSS international survey among fourth graders (Mullis & Martin, 2013). These items were selected because they engage mathematical problem-solving ability. All the items required solving a mathematical problem starting from a given set of data. To assess participants’ metacognitive skills, we used the Italian version of Panaoura and Philippou’s (2007) questionnaire (15-item version; range score 15-75). Participants were given 45 minutes for completing the battery of tests

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