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Women and men in chess - smashing the stereotypes

User Rating: / 100
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Written by Natalia Pogonina   
Tuesday, 23 June 2009
Article Index
Women and men in chess - smashing the stereotypes
Page 2
Page 3

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On June 5, 2009 WGM Natalia Pogonina and Peter Zhdanov got married she a Women's Grandmaster, he a successful IT-specialist and debate expert. Peter is also Natalias manager, together they are writing a book called "Chess Kamasutra". Today they share with us their views on the perennial topic why women are worse at chess than men, and take a look at the future of womens chess.


"They're all weak, all women. They're stupid compared to men.
They shouldn't play chess, you know. They're like beginners. They lose every single game against a man.
There isn't a woman player in the world I can't give knight-odds to and still beat."
Robert James Fischer, 1962, Harper's Magazine
 

Chess is often divided into mens chess and womens chess. The classification is quite relative, since women can participate in tournaments for men, while men cant take part in womens events. This discrimination has always been a subject of heated discussions. So, is it true that men are better than women in chess, and if so, then what are the reasons for that?


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WGM Natalia Pogonina
 

Genes?


Chess is an intellectual sport, physical strength is by far not the key factor there. Endurance is also not a factor, because women are probably even more enduring than men.
 

Some say its about the level of testosterone that affects competitiveness men are more likely to be trying to excel at something than women. However, if we look at the percentage of so-called grandmaster draws among women and men then well see that womens fighting spirits are definitely higher. You may say that its an exception from the rule, but we still doubt that its the high level of testosterone that makes top women players good at chess.
 

So, maybe women are just less smart than men? According to multiple studies, on the average the answer is no. Then whats the problem?
 

Historical reasons


Women have started playing chess professionally long after men. Nowadays the number of professional women chess players is growing, but the proportion is still incomparable. There are very few women in chess, so they have meager chances to enter the world chess elite.
 

Look at the top-300 list of chess players and count the number of women there. If you dont miss anyone, youll find only three of them. Almost one to a hundred, great ratio, isnt it? A few more illustrative figures: according to FIDEs website, there are 20 female players who hold the GM title to 1201 male grandmasters (about 1 to 60), 77 female IMs to 2854 male (about 1 to 37), 239 WGMs and 7 female FMs to 5400 male FMs (about 1 to 22). Side note: notice the downward trend?

Upbringing and social stereotypes


The other important issue is that in order to become a top chess player youve got to study chess diligently from early childhood. Parents (who have a large influence on their childrens choice of hobbies) deem chess as a strange pastime for a girl, and also do not appreciate the fact that their daughter will be spending a lot of time with male adults or teenagers (especially when leaving home to play in tournaments).
 

Roy Gates (Southern California, USA) recalls:
I think that there's definitely some cultural/sociological bias at work that has made it more difficult for women to excel in chess. I realized a few years ago (after it was pointed out to me by an ex-girlfriend) that I was taking a much more active role in my nephews chess education than I was with my niece despite the fact that she was more eager to play/learn and seemed to take to the game much quicker. I had subconsciously not taken her interest in chess seriously and was mortified when I realized I was helping to perpetuate the myth that boys are better chess players.

Michael Ziern (Frankfurt, Germany) adds:
It is hard to convince parents to send girls to tournaments along with their male club colleagues. Parents are often afraid to allow their 10 or 12 year old girl to travel around with a group of boys and young men. If girls play fewer tournaments, they do not improve so quickly and lose interest. In order to solve this problem, my club cooperated with clubs from neighboring towns to have greater groups of girls who could share rooms in youth hostels, make friends etc. with some success.

Moreover, serious chess studies require substantial investments (coaches, trips etc.), while its a well-known fact that women chess players cant make a decent living playing chess unless theyre at the very top. Thats why parents discourage their daughters interest in chess whats the point of wasting so much time on a dubious activity?
 

When Natalia was twelve she even had to move to another city to get access to good coaching and financing life in Russia in the 90s used to be tough for anyone, not to mention chess players. So she and her coach could hardly find money for the chess trips and had to carry heavy bags full of chess books with them and sell the volumes in order to compensate the expenses.

Psychology


This factor seems to me to be the most important. A stereotype exists in chess that women are no match for men. It is based on statistical data. Thats why many female chess players are taught from early childhood that theyll never make it to mens level. TV and books are also trying to convince them that its unreal. But all this is a myth! The first woman to break it was the incredible Judit Polgar, the greatest woman chess player of all times.


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The Polgar sisters: Susan, Judit and Zsófia


She and her two older sisters, Grandmaster Susan and International Master Zsófia, were part of an educational experiment carried out by their father László Polgár, in an attempt to prove that children could make exceptional achievements if trained in a specialist subject from a very early age. "Geniuses are made, not born," was László's thesis. He and his wife Klara educated their three daughters at home, with chess as the specialist subject. However, chess was not taught to the exclusion of everything else, as was the case with Gata Kamsky. Each of them has several diplomas and speaks four to eight languages. Their father also taught his three daughters the international language Esperanto.

 
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Polgar J - Kasparov G,
Russia vs. The Rest of the World match, Moscow 2002
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4.O-O Nxe4 5.d4 Nd6 6.Bxc6 dxc6 7.dxe5 Nf5 8.Qxd8+ Kxd8 9.Nc3 h6 10.Rd1+ Ke8 11.h3 Be7 12.Ne2 Nh4 13.Nxh4 Bxh4 14.Be3 Bf5 15.Nd4 Bh7 16.g4 Be7 17.Kg2 h5 18.Nf5 Bf8 19.Kf3 Bg6 20.Rd2 hxg4+ 21.hxg4 Rh3+ 22.Kg2 Rh7 23.Kg3 f6 24.Bf4 Bxf5 25.gxf5 fxe5 26.Re1 Bd6 27.Bxe5 Kd7 28. c4 c5 29.Bxd6 cxd6 30.Re6 Rah8 31.Rexd6+ Kc8 32.R2d5 Rh3+ 33.Kg2 Rh2+ 34.Kf3 R2h3+ 35.Ke4 b6 36.Rc6+ Kb8 37.Rd7 Rh2 38.Ke3 Rf8 39.Rcc7 Rxf5 40.Rb7+ Kc8 41.Rdc7+ Kd8 42.Rxg7 Kc8 1-0.

Different priorities?


 What if women are just not interested in chess? Could it be one of those activities that appeal to men more than to women (like playing PC games, fighting, shooting, cussing etc.?). There was even an amusing hypothesis that chess is for immature and weird people, so women (who tend to mature faster than men) dont take up such a strange occupation.
 

Robert Tierney (Binghamton NY, USA):
Adding my two-cents here, I think the question is phrased wrong.  "Why do women play chess worse than men" is an improper question, framed in a male-dominated area with a male-dominated history.  Since everyone (here) seems to agree that women are quicker learners than men, and mature quicker than men, perhaps they are too intelligent to spend more time at something that is just a game, as Morphy stated several times.  Maybe the question should be, are men too stupid or too immature to quit obsessing on chess?  Then maybe we wouldn't have this topic getting abused over and over again.  "Chess is a sign of lack of intelligence"--now wouldn't that be a kick in the head?

Different tastes and priorities are probably part of the answer, but they are also closely connected with the other reasons. For instance, priorities are largely affected by social stereotypes and upbringing, so if (theoretically) we change them (e.g. encourage boys to play dolls and girls to study chess), we may see a completely opposite result.


Image
 Natalia Pogonina in 2005

Its also important to note that (no matter what their interests are) most women have to dedicate a lot of time to their family: e.g. when a child is born they dont have enough time to study chess or participate in multiple chess tournaments. Some people argued that men are also distracted from chess by their parental responsibilities, but its clear that the scale is incomparable.
 

Steps to take


Final question what should we do to make chess more popular among girls?
 

Run an educational campaign aimed at parents to help them learn that chess is a great game that develops the persons mind. Crush the stereotypes and provide enough information about the benefits of studying chess, and parents will be encouraging their daughters interest in chess!
 

Introducing chess in the school curriculum could also be a great step towards providing girls with opportunities of becoming good chess players.
 

Another key thing is sponsorship women chess is very attractive and exciting, so its worth investing into. If prizes in womens events increase to the same level as in mens, then girls (and their parents) will have a good financial motivation to consider chess seriously.
 

Finally, the girls themselves should know that they are equal to men in terms of chess talents, play in mens tournaments, study hard and believe in their powers. If most women start acting that way, then one day quantity will lead to quality, and the world chess elite will be enjoying more female players.
 

Its essential to remember that the sky is the limit and all the obstacles are in our heads
 

About the authors:


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WGM Natalia Pogonina (born on March 9, 1985) is one of the best female chess players in the world, member of the Russian chess team. Woman Grandmaster (WGM), three-times European champion (U16, twice U18), bronze prize winner at the World Championship (U18) and European Women Championship, winner of the gold medal at the 1st International Mind Sports Games, co-winner of the 2008 Student World Championship, and #1 at multiple prestigious international tournaments (2006 Bykova Memorial, 2007 Rudenko memorial, 2009 Moscow Open, etc.). Her current FIDE rating is over 2500 a mark that is associated with the title of a male Grandmaster.
 

Peter Zhdanov (born on January, 8, 1986) is a successful IT-specialist, leading world debate expert, top blogger and a proficient chess player. Peter is also Natalia Pogoninas manager, the administrator of the official Natalia Pogonina website and Natalias co-author of the upcoming book Chess Kamasutra.
 

Originally published at Chessbase.com

 

 

 




Comments (26)
11. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it on 04:49 25 2009 .
 
 
 
12. Written by on 18:56 25 2009 .
 
 
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
 
13. Written by on 19:19 25 2009 .
 
 
!=)) ! 
, , , 2500-2550, , ( ...) , , , (). 
- , ... 
... , - . 
.
 
14. Written by Peter Zhdanov on 20:43 25 2009 .
 
 
Max - , , . Gambiter.ru - , ! 
 
- , , . , . . 
 
- , . , . ( ), , , .
 
15. Written by on 05:37 02 2009 .
 
 
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
 
16. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it on 17:54 07 2009 .
 
 
I've always agreed on what you say, but hey, men playing chess don't use their logical mind, they like to put women down, maybe to feel better about themselves! haha.. :)
 
17. Written by on 06:44 08 2009 .
 
 
, - . 
, , . 

- , , . 
- , , . . - , . . 

, .
 
18. Written by Peter Zhdanov on 08:04 08 2009 .
 
 
, . ( !) . , - - . , . 
 
" " - , . . 
 
, - , . , , ? ;)
 
19. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it on 10:24 09 2009 .
 
 
A very special kind of activity
I suppose that people are diffferent and still quite similar. As to sex differences I guess that if we took "all" factors into account women probably would"win". But chess is a very special game. 
 
Better to appreciate what everybody can contribute best as an individual and in real life winning is not well-defined and seldom the issue. 
 
In particular we men ought to appreciate our women as the fantastic people they are regardless if they play chess well or not and why not give them appreciation if they play well?
 
20. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it on 15:06 09 2009 .
 
 
Natalia: It is time to a major change in
Rio de Janeiro, 9 de julho de 2009. 
 
Ol, amiga Natalia! 
 
I am a "capivara" chess player from Brasil. Sorry about bad my English... 
 
I do agree with Peter's and your's words and, specially, with the conclusions of Anne Maass, Claudio D'Ettole and Mara Cadinu estudies. If women play men, their own stereotypes causes lower performance. 
 
The real problem, so, it is what you will do about it? I think that in order to contribute to the woman's chess, a tought player like you must do a major change in your chess career, playing more and more "absolute" tournaments and fighting expecially hard against the male players. 
 
The Polgars sisters did it (not only Judith) and achieved success. And a number of womans dit it (or is doing) so. It is your chance to do it eather! 
 
You think you are not able to "sentar a porrada" in a 2600 male player? I think you are! If you not, please, read again the conclusions of Anne Maass, Claudio D'Ettole and Mara Cadinu estudies... 
 
Let's do it! 
 
Your big fan, 
 
Alvaro Frota
 


Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 June 2009 )
 
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