rdecredico wrote on 10/14/09 at 16:18:09:
One major fallacy is the notion that everyone can improve and that improvement is a natural thing that only has to be pursued in proper fashion to be achieved.
No one has said that improvement must pursued in "proper" fashion to be achieved. What I, at least, have said is that some approaches to pursuing improvement are more likely to be conducive to this goal than others. But yes, I modestly do assert that
everyone can improve and that
improvement is a natural thing.
rdecredico wrote on 10/14/09 at 16:18:09:
Like music and higher mathematics, not everyone has a neural network in their brain that can be programmed for chess, regardless of methodology. Without the genetic predisposition to reach higher levels of any pursuit, one will not reach the higher level, regardless of coach or coaching methods.
I must bow to your expertise in neuroscience and genetics, but I will readily concede that there are some people who aren't cut out for chess. I am at a loss, however, to understand how this should inform the practice of chess instruction.
rdecredico wrote on 10/14/09 at 16:18:09:
Thus coaches and their methods often end up gaining far too much credit for something that would usually happen in the natural order of events anyway.
As for helping adults improve, that is the easiest money to pick from the tree as adults will not improve very much at all in chess, regardless of methodology employed.
Perhaps you find it amusing to set up straw men and then knock them down. But so far as I know, nobody thinks that chess coaches can turn absolutely anyone into a good player, or claims that coaches solely or even chiefly are responsible for the progress of chess students. Exactly what it is that chess coaches or teachers in general do, I am not entirely sure. But mostly, I think they model ways of thinking and behaving that the student then imitates and adopts. The most powerful principle of human learning, I have always believed, is "monkey see, monkey do." Modeling certain behaviors and modes of thinking in ways that engage the student and arouse his desire to imitate; that I think is the key thing about teaching anything, be it quantum mechanics or automotive mechanics. But in a fundamental sense, all education is self-education and the teacher at best is a facilitator.
But all this about chess coaches is really beside the point, since the question is, what shall
a not-very-skillful adult do to improve at chess? The question doesn't presuppose that there is a coach in the picture.