Study Plan Below 1000
Study Plan Below 1000
Study Plan Below 1000
If you google “chess improvement plan for beginners”, you’ll find conflicting
results… Most of what you will find will either have complicated outlines (in
order to sell you lots of stuff in between) or super general 1-page
summaries.
As a result, most chess lovers get very confused, never learn the most
essential activities to focus on, and never achieve a 1,000 rating.
This depends on how much time you can spend on chess and how
accurately you’ll follow the improvement plan I’ll describe.
Unfortunately, you’ll not be the 1st one who achieved it by using this
improvement plan, and you’ll not be the last.
But you’ll be in the 20% of people who plays chess and gets there.
😁
What if you never get there?
You can sue me
Let’s go.
2. Studying too much and not essential things. Playing too little, and never
REALLY learning what they’ve studied.
3. Not analyzing their games and not fixing their mistakes. And then they
keep repeating the same errors over and over again.
These 5 steps:
https://chessmood.com/blog/how-to-get-better-at-chess
Thanks!
Now you know the key to chess growth for every level!
The question is, what’s the right balance for your level?
For getting to the 1,000 level, you should keep around this ratio:
Study - 25%
Practice - 65%
Fix - 10%
Yeah, most of the time, you should be playing! It’s about ⅔ of the time you
dedicate to chess!
When you get to 1,500, and then 2,000, you’ll see that the better you
become, the more you need to study and this ratio drastically changes.
But for below the 1,000 level, most of the time you need to play!
You need to play/lose your first hundred games as fast as possible.
With playing, you’ll get more connections between your brain neurons.
You’ll learn patterns and ideas on your own. Your brain will figure out lots of
stuff.
(More about this topic you’ll learn in the 1st section of the BlunderProof
course.)
There are also more advantages of playing that you’ll soon see.
You should study only about 25% of the time.
As you’ve already learned in the above-mentioned article, you need
information to digest.
And with the other 10%, you fix your mistakes, so you don’t repeat them.
Step 2 - Study
😊
At this level, the study plan is straightforward.
You don’t need to read 20 books and go through 20 courses
At this level, often you’ll have 1-move blunders. You’ll leave the pieces
under attack. You’ll miss mates in one. You’ll have difficulty visualizing 2-3
move calculations.
At your level, all of these challenges have 1 Doctor.
His name is “Play!”
The more you play, the better you become at all those!
Very easy. You don’t need different books, software, and all kinds of
different stuff.
We cover your back.
https://chessmood.com/course/tactic-ninja
If you follow the instructions of the course, your tactics will improve day by
day. Just one adjustment for your level.
Go until section 22.
Sections 23-29, you can start after crossing 1,000 or when you get close to
it.
But you don’t need it at this level. Don’t touch that course! 😊
Think about coming close to it only after fully finishing Tactic Ninja.
P. S.
Here is an additional article on how to improve chess tactics:
https://chessmood.com/blog/improve-chess-tactics
Openings
2. They study openings too deeply, trying to win the game from the opening
or trying to know everything.
3. They study lots of trappy openings and variations. Yeah, they might win
some rating points in the short term, but they lay a very bad foundation for
their future growth.
● It’ll give you a huge advantage over other players below the 1,000
level.
● You’ll know what to fight for in the opening (99% don’t know, they just
make random moves).
● You’ll get good positions out of the opening and have an easy game
later.
2. As most of your opponents will not know any theory, just the Opening
Principles course will be enough for dominating from the opening. For most
of you. Most of the time.
I recommend studying specific openings only after crossing the 1,000 level.
😊
In exceptional situations where you may get uncomfortable positions from
the opening, or if you want to learn some openings very much, — okay
https://chessmood.com/course/whitemood-openings
https://chessmood.com/course/blackmood-openings
You’ll create a step-by-step opening repertoire for both, White and Black.
Just don’t try to memorize everything in the courses. The first 1-5 moves
will be enough most of the time.
Then download the PDF and PGN files from the courses, complete the
homework, and then revise them from time to time.
You’ll see how they think and punish the mistakes of this level.
This will be invaluable and one of the most efficient ways to spend your
study time.
In case you need more, go through our “Rating Booster” section one by
one.
https://chessmood.com/courses#group=1
You’ll learn:
37 mating patterns
How to stop blunders
The basics of a successful attack
The basics of defense
How to save lost positions
How to win winning ones
Endgame RoadMap
Must-know endgame theory
😊
Once again. You’ll need those courses after crossing the 1,000 level.
Turn to them only if you can’t resist the temptation
You should dedicate 90% of your study time to improving your tactics.
Go through the Tactic Ninja course and solve the offered tactics. Do this
over and over again until the moment you solve everything in less than 3
seconds.
The other 10% of your study time should be spent improving your opening
knowledge. Have a full mastery of the Opening Principles course and
watch our live-streaming events. And if you want it really much, only then
look at our additional courses.
Step 3 - Practice
As we reviewed already, you should spend around 65% of your chess time
actually playing chess.
This includes:
● Offline tournaments
● Online games
● With training partners
😅
It seems to me that chess.com constantly makes you feel you’re the worst
player ever
😁
And offers “to improve your chess”… How? By buying all kinds of stuff you
don’t need
😊
But on this level, I recommend avoiding it.
Bullet is forbidden
If you very much love to play blitz and have fun — then okay. Let’s make a
deal. The fastest time control you should play with is 3+2. Always try to play
with an increment. (Soon you’ll find out why).
5+3,
10+5,
15+10,
30+20.
More about what time control to choose and why you should always play
with an increment can be found here:
https://chessmood.com/blog/what-chess-time-control-to-choose
My Golden Method
When you play with longer time controls, you can stick with 2-5 games per
session.
The key is to always decide how many games you will play before
starting the session.
A few more tips
Mindset is very important. I have many tips to share that will help you play
better, maintain the right mood, and ultimately have more fun.
Step 4 - Fixing
This is not the sexiest step and not the most fun part.
Having the right mindset will not only bring more joy, when you do your
favorite activity - chess, but it’ll also help you to grow much faster!
2. The secret to lasting love for chess and how to avoid emotional
bankruptcy
https://chessmood.com/blog/lasting-love-for-chess
3. Don’t just crave results. Deserve it. Often success will come later.
https://chessmood.com/blog/if-you-want-to-achieve-more-you-need-to-dese
rve-more
● You can psychologically support each other and challenge each other
to grow
● And more…
Whenever you have a day with very limited time, try to find 5-20 minutes to
dedicate to puzzles (solving them or watching the Tactic Ninja course), or
playing.
You want to build a connection between your neurons and not get rusty.
Wishing you to have the Right Mood, have a fun journey, and hit your chess
goals soon.
GM Avetik
P. S.
Your feedback is highly appreciated.
You can share it here:
https://forms.gle/2z5FEzX2zwzEkpLt9