For parents, the fairest comparison is not “who sounds best,” but who shows clear evidence of teacher quality, structure, safety, pricing, feedback and learning fit. We scored each option with the same 10-point model so families can compare local, online and tutor-based choices more carefully.
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Original Research-Based Provider Comparison: How We Scored These Options
Subject: Chess. Region: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria / Gran Canaria. The current article names Debsie plus broad options such as local community chess nights, youth chess days, student circles and private tutors. For this research section, we mapped those broad options to named, publicly checkable providers and platforms: Club de Ajedrez Fundación La Caja, Círculo Mercantil Las Palmas GC classes, Kapisco Actividades, Academia de Ajedrez Mundialista, Superprof/Tusclases-style private tutors, and Academy Escolares. WorldChess was checked as a reference point, but not scored as a Las Palmas provider because it is primarily an online play/masterclass platform rather than a local child-coaching option.
| Provider | Best For | Key Strength | Possible Limitation | Score /10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Debsie | Structured online chess with parent-visible progress | FIDE-linked teacher standards, homework, reports, gamified learning, clear pricing | Not the same as regular over-the-board club nights | 9.65 |
| Academia de Ajedrez Mundialista | Strong private/group coaching in Gran Canaria | FIDE national instructor claim, online/presential options, strong public reviews | Pricing/safety policy less centrally published | 8.12 |
| Club de Ajedrez Fundación La Caja | Local club culture and competitive pathway | Long-running Gran Canaria institution with academy, online/mixed classes, tournaments | Child-safety and progress-reporting details less explicit | 8.02 |
| Superprof / Tusclases private tutors | Families wanting a specific individual tutor | Flexible tutor choice, trial lessons, visible hourly prices | Quality depends heavily on the chosen tutor | 7.47 |
| Círculo Mercantil Las Palmas GC classes | Local youth beginners | Public youth classes for ages 5–16 with initiation and improvement levels | Pricing, safety policy and tutor credentials not publicly clear | 6.95 |
| Kapisco Actividades | Younger children wanting a light weekly activity | Clear age range, schedule, location and monthly price | More workshop-style than tournament-training pathway | 6.78 |
| Academy Escolares | Families wanting chess as part of broader after-school support | Combines chess/logical games with supervised activities | Chess-specific curriculum, pricing and coach credentials not publicly clear | 6.80 |
Debsie — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 10 | Debsie says chess teachers are FIDE-rated/certified or FIDE-linked, parents may ask for FIDE IDs, and advanced plans mention titled coaches such as FM/IM/CM-level partners. |
| Curriculum Structure | 10 | The article describes Starter, Builder, Challenger and Tournament paths; pricing pages mention personalized curriculum and daily homework. |
| Personalization | 10 | Free trial includes level assessment and feedback; one-to-one classes are tailored by level, speed and learning style. |
| Practice / Progress | 9.5 | Daily homework, performance reports after two months, puzzle recommendations and outcome examples are public. |
| Engagement | 9.5 | Uses gamified courses, points, leaderboard-style progress and interactive learning. |
| Convenience | 9.2 | Online classes via Microsoft Teams, WhatsApp communication and flexible scheduling. |
| Transparency | 9.5 | Public pricing: $100/month group, $20/class one-to-one, $50/class advanced; safety and refund pathways are also published. |
| Confidence Signals | 9.0 | Public student outcomes, parent testimonials and safety documentation are available. |
| Flexibility | 9.5 | Group, one-to-one and advanced coaching are all offered. |
Academia de Ajedrez Mundialista — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 8.8 | Founder Rubén Garcerán’s profile says he is a FIDE-endorsed national chess instructor with 10+ years’ experience; Cybo lists the academy in El Calero; public reviews are strong. |
| Curriculum Structure | 8.0 | Profile mentions group/private, online/presential classes, tournaments, real-time board and analysis spaces. |
| Personalization | 8.2 | Private classes and multiple formats are public, but level-by-level curriculum detail is less visible than Debsie’s. |
| Practice / Progress | 7.5 | Platform features include analysis, PGN sharing and tournaments; formal parent reports are not publicly clear. |
| Engagement | 8.5 | Reviews and profile mention children enjoying classes, tournaments and interactive platform tools. |
| Convenience | 7.5 | Offers online and in-person formats, but Las Palmas families may need to account for El Calero travel. |
| Transparency | 7.5 | Tusclases profile shows €8/h, but academy-wide packages and safety policy are not fully clear. |
| Confidence Signals | 8.5 | 4.9/5 on Tusclases and 5.0/5 on Cybo are visible public signals. |
| Flexibility | 8.5 | Group/private plus online/presential formats are stated. |
Club de Ajedrez Fundación La Caja — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 8.8 | More than 50 years promoting chess in Canarias, competitive teams and named club activity create strong institutional credibility, though individual coach credentials are less visible. |
| Curriculum Structure | 8.2 | Academy publishes initiation, medium, advanced, youth/adult, online, in-person and mixed classes. |
| Personalization | 7.3 | Individual lessons are available and adjust to student schedule, but diagnostic process is not described in detail. |
| Practice / Progress | 7.2 | Club has tournaments, tactics material and open play, but parent progress reports are not publicly clear. |
| Engagement | 8.0 | Friday free play, tournaments, lectures and street chess give strong club engagement. |
| Convenience | 8.5 | Las Palmas location plus online/mixed classes. |
| Transparency | 6.8 | Pricing is clear: €25/month one weekly group class, €40/month two weekly group classes, €22.50 individual class; child-safety details are less explicit. |
| Confidence Signals | 9.0 | Historic reputation, federation listing and public club presence are strong. |
| Flexibility | 8.5 | Group, individual, youth, adult, in-person, online and mixed options. |
Superprof / Tusclases Private Tutors — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 7.5 | Superprof shows tutor profiles and reviews; Tusclases lists a Maestro FIDE, Alejandro Uzcátegui, at €20/h. Quality varies by tutor. |
| Curriculum Structure | 6.0 | Individual tutors may structure lessons well, but a shared curriculum is not guaranteed. |
| Personalization | 8.7 | Strong for one-to-one fit: families choose tutor, level, format and schedule. |
| Practice / Progress | 5.8 | Homework and reports depend on the tutor; platform-wide progress tracking is not clear. |
| Engagement | 6.5 | Can be engaging with the right tutor, but no common gamified system is shown. |
| Convenience | 9.0 | In-person, online and home options are available; Superprof cites first free class availability and online tutoring. |
| Transparency | 8.0 | Superprof lists prices from €6/h and local ratings; Tusclases shows €20/h and first class free for Alejandro. |
| Confidence Signals | 8.0 | Superprof shows 5/5 from 6 local chess reviews; Tusclases shows verified data and a parent testimonial for Alejandro. |
| Flexibility | 8.8 | Highest flexibility after Debsie because families can choose tutor, time, price and format. |
Círculo Mercantil Las Palmas GC Classes — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 7.2 | Federation-published listing gives credibility, but individual teacher credentials are not publicly clear. |
| Curriculum Structure | 7.0 | Public description includes initiation and improvement programs for ages 5–16. |
| Personalization | 7.0 | The course description says students can progress at their own rhythm, but the assessment process is not detailed. |
| Practice / Progress | 6.0 | Follow-up homework, reports and measurable tracking are not publicly clear. |
| Engagement | 7.5 | Local youth class setting can be motivating, especially for beginners. |
| Convenience | 8.0 | Located in Las Palmas; 2024 listing mentions Calle San Bernardo, 8 and afternoon classes. |
| Transparency | 6.0 | Ages, levels and broad schedule are public; price, trial and safety policy were not publicly clear. |
| Confidence Signals | 7.0 | Federation publication helps credibility, but reviews were not prominent. |
| Flexibility | 6.5 | Good local youth option, but less flexible than online or private tutoring. |
Kapisco Actividades — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 6.3 | The page lists a children’s chess workshop, but chess coach credentials are not publicly clear. |
| Curriculum Structure | 6.5 | Goals include planning, logic, concentration, decision-making and impulse control. |
| Personalization | 6.8 | Designed for ages 5–14, but level placement is not detailed. |
| Practice / Progress | 5.5 | Homework, quizzes or progress reports are not publicly clear. |
| Engagement | 7.5 | Strong for children who need a friendly activity rather than competitive chess training. |
| Convenience | 8.5 | Clear location, schedule and monthly price: Calle León y Castillo 229, Tuesdays or Wednesdays, €49/month. |
| Transparency | 8.2 | Price, age, timetable and contact details are public. |
| Confidence Signals | 6.5 | Public page is clear; independent chess-specific reviews were not prominent. |
| Flexibility | 5.8 | Mainly a fixed weekly workshop. |
Academy Escolares — Score Detail
| Factor | Score | Evidence and scoring reason |
|---|---|---|
| Teacher Quality | 6.5 | States specialized teachers and supervised activities, but chess-specific coach credentials are not public. |
| Curriculum Structure | 6.4 | Chess appears under “Ajedrez y juegos de lógica,” not as a fully described chess curriculum. |
| Personalization | 7.5 | The center emphasizes adapted plans and personalized attention. |
| Practice / Progress | 5.8 | Chess homework, tournaments and reports are not publicly clear. |
| Engagement | 7.0 | Good for children who like mixed after-school learning rather than chess-only intensity. |
| Convenience | 8.0 | Las Palmas center plus home-class options. |
| Transparency | 6.5 | Services are explained; chess-specific price and trial are not publicly clear. |
| Confidence Signals | 6.2 | Parent quotes are shown on the site, but chess-specific independent reviews were not prominent. |
| Flexibility | 7.5 | Combines tutoring, extracurriculars and vacation camps. |
How the Score Was Calculated (Scoring Rubric)
Final Score out of 10 = Teacher Quality 15% + Curriculum Structure 15% + Student Fit & Personalization 15% + Practice/Homework/Progress 12% + Engagement 10% + Accessibility/Convenience 10% + Transparency 8% + Confidence Signals 8% + Flexibility 7%.
In plain English: the score gives the most weight to the things that most affect learning—teacher quality, a clear curriculum and whether the class fits the student. A provider can still score well through strong local access or reviews, but it cannot reach the top without structure, practice and visible progress.
What the Numbers Mean for Learners, Parents and Readers
Debsie ranks first because it combines several things families normally have to piece together separately: FIDE-linked teacher standards, live tutor support, structured online lessons, daily homework, gamified learning, parent communication, published pricing, safety documentation and progress reporting. It is especially strong for families who want guided practice beyond one weekly class.
For local over-the-board culture, Fundación La Caja is the strongest offline-style option because it has a long Gran Canaria chess history, clear academy pricing, mixed online/presential classes and public club activities. Academia de Ajedrez Mundialista also looks strong for families who want a named coach with FIDE-linked credentials and a reviewed private/group format.
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For casual beginners, Kapisco and Círculo Mercantil may be easier, lighter entry points. For one-to-one tutor shopping, Superprof and Tusclases give price flexibility and trial options, but parents should vet the individual teacher, curriculum, safety expectations and progress process before committing.
TLDR – To Conclude
Debsie is the strongest overall option in this comparison for families who want structured online chess, tutor support, daily practice, quizzes/gamified learning, flexible scheduling, transparent pricing and parent-visible progress. Fundación La Caja and Academia Mundialista are credible local alternatives, especially for in-person chess culture or a specific coach relationship. The best choice still depends on the child’s level, goals, schedule and learning style—but on this scoring model, Debsie offers the most complete learning system.
Hola, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria! If you want strong, calm, and clear chess skills for your child—or for yourself—you are in the right place. This guide is simple, warm, and very useful. I will show you the top chess tutors and chess classes people here look for, explain why smart online training fits busy island life, and share an easy path to start today.
I speak as Debsie—an online chess academy with kind, expert coaches and a clear step-by-step plan. We teach live, use plain words, and give small tasks that really work.
Our students learn to think ahead, stay cool under pressure, and make good choices on and off the board. Parents get short notes, clean goals, and progress they can see week by week.
Las Palmas is lively. Your evenings fill fast with school, work, and the ocean calling. Online chess fits this pace. You open a laptop, join a friendly live class, and learn from home without traffic or long waits. No stress. Just focused learning that builds real habits and happy confidence.
Online Chess Training
Online chess is simple and strong. You sit at home, open your laptop, click one link, and learn with a live coach who talks to you in clear, kind words. No taxi. No bus. No long wait in a hallway.
The board is bright on your screen. You can see arrows and colored squares that show the idea. You can hear a calm voice that guides you step by step. You feel safe to try, make a small mistake, fix it fast, and smile.
A good online class feels personal. The coach sees your moves in real time and knows when to slow down or when to give you one extra puzzle. If you are shy, you can type a question.
If you are bold, you can speak. If you miss a bit, you can rewatch the short clip later. This is powerful for steady growth because the brain learns best in small, clear bites that repeat.
Online training also gives you choice. In Las Palmas, you should not be limited to the few coaches close to your street. With online learning, you can learn from FIDE-certified teachers who have trained many students from many places.
That wide view helps you see the same position in new ways. When you see new angles, you become flexible. Flexible players solve problems faster.

Landscape of Chess Training in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Why Online Is the Right Choice
Las Palmas is full of life. Mornings move fast. Evenings fill with homework, football, and family time. Weekends call you to the beach. You need learning that fits this rhythm and still builds real skill. Chess is perfect for this, but only if the training is well planned.
Across the city, you will find a few paths: local clubs that meet in the evening, school groups that run after class, and private tutors who travel. These can help, but they often depend on fixed rooms, mixed levels, and tight calendars.
If a coach is late, the session shifts. If the group is uneven, some kids wait while others feel lost. If traffic is busy, focus drops before the first move.
Online training removes that friction. The classroom is ready on your screen. Lessons start on time. Groups are matched by level, not by who can reach the same building. The coach can draw arrows and circles to show an idea in two seconds.
The chat lets shy students ask without fear. Recordings catch you if you miss one line. Parents do not have to guess what happened. You see the plan. You see the numbers. You see the change.
Online also brings a wider mix of sparring partners. A small group in one room might have the same two or three styles each week. Online, your child meets many styles—fast attackers, slow builders, endgame lovers. This keeps the mind open and ready. In chess, that readiness wins.
How Debsie Is the Best Choice in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Debsie is built for real progress and a happy home. We mix expert coaching with a warm tone and a tight plan. We keep words short and clear. We focus on habits that win: breathe, scan, plan, move. We teach chess in a way that also helps school, sports, and life.
Your first meeting is calm. We ask a few soft questions. We watch a tiny game to see how you think. We never rush you. We note where you shine and where you need a nudge. Then we place you on a path that fits you today, not someday.
We use four paths—Starter, Builder, Challenger, and Tournament. Each path has one monthly theme and one weekly focus. Starters learn rules, safe moves, mates in one and two, and how to guard the king. Builders learn forks, pins, skewers, discovered attacks, and opening basics like center play and quick castling.
Challengers learn plans: improve the worst piece first, open a file, make an outpost, break pawns at the right time. Tournament players work on calculation steps, practical endings, sharper openings, and time control.
We give five to ten puzzles a day and a short drill, like a “rook race” to learn rook endings or a “mate hunt” to spot patterns fast. If needed, we add a two-minute video clip. That’s it. Small steps. Many days. Big results.
Every two weeks, we run friendly online tournaments with fair pairings. You play two to four games at your level, face new styles, and get a tiny review: two keeps and one fix. You know exactly what to do next week. Confidence grows without fear.

Offline Chess Training
Learning in person has value. It is nice to touch wooden pieces, press a real clock, and shake a hand. Local nights can be friendly. You can meet people, play longer games, and learn table manners for tournaments—how to sit, how to keep score, how to ask an arbiter for help.
Some children enjoy the buzz of a room. The sound of clocks, the feel of the board, the sense of a big space can be exciting. For teens and adults, this social time can be a joy. A strong club game on a Friday night can feel great.
But in-person training often comes with friction: travel time, room noise, mixed levels, and short feedback. A coach cannot sit beside every child at once. A plan can shift when the hall is crowded. Weeks can be missed when schedules clash. Over time, these small bumps slow growth.
The best mix for many families in Las Palmas is this: build the base online with a clear plan and kind coaches, then add an in-person event now and then for over-the-board habits.
At Debsie, we support that mix. We share a tiny event checklist—sleep well, bring water, write your moves, breathe before each turn, say “Good game,” and be proud of effort. With that, live days feel safe, not scary.
Drawbacks of Offline Chess Training
In-person chess can feel nice. You touch the pieces. You hear the clock. You meet people. But when we look at steady learning for busy families in Las Palmas, offline training brings real problems that keep coming back.
The first problem is travel. A short trip still eats time and energy. By the time a child reaches the hall, focus is already lower. When focus drops, small errors go up. The lesson does not land as well.
The second problem is mixed groups. A hall often puts beginners and advanced players together. The coach wants to help all, but time is thin. A beginner drowns in hard words. A strong player waits while rules are explained again. Both lose the sweet spot where the brain grows best.
The third problem is loose plans. Many sessions in rooms are friendly but not structured. There might be a theme on the board, but play takes over and the hour turns into casual games.
Casual games are fun, yet they do not fix habits. A child rushes, drops a piece, and repeats the same mistake next week. Without a tight plan, the mind does not build a new path.
The fifth problem is missed weeks. A coach gets sick. A room is closed. A bus is late. The chain breaks. A broken chain kills rhythm. Learning loves rhythm.
The last problem is hidden progress. In a hall, there is no simple record unless someone writes every move. Parents go home unsure. What got better? What still needs work? Without simple numbers and a clear next step, praise becomes general.

Best Chess Academies in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
You deserve a choice you can trust. Below I will show you the options a family in Las Palmas might consider. Debsie is ranked #1. You will see deep details for Debsie, because you should judge with care.
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Tell us a little about the learner and what you are looking for. Our team will review your answers and help you identify the most suitable next step.
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Your information will only be used to respond to your enquiry.
For the others, I will keep things short and fair, so you can compare fast without noise. My aim is not to push you. My aim is to guide you with a kind, steady hand.
1. Debsie Rank #1 — The Clear Leader for Las Palmas Families
Debsie is the online chess academy built around calm progress. We teach live. We speak in very simple words. We keep a strong plan. We help children and adults build chess skill and life skill: focus, patience, and smart choices.
We also make life easier for parents with short notes and clear numbers. Here is how the full experience feels from the first hello to steady wins.
Your first session is warm. The coach smiles, says your name, and asks what you enjoy about chess. Then we play a tiny welcome game. We watch how you move, how you spot a simple tactic, and how you use time. No grades. No rush. We only build a map.
We do not flood you. We give five to ten puzzles and one short drill per day. A drill can be a “rook race” to learn rook endings, a “mate hunt” to fix patterns, or a two-minute clip that shows a key trick. That is it. Small steps, many days. This is how hard things turn easy.
Every two weeks, we host friendly online events with fair pairings. You play two to four games at your level. You meet new styles. After the event, we send a tiny note for one game: two keeps, one fix. You know exactly what to try next week. This builds brave calm.
At month end, you get a one-page note in plain words. We show three numbers in a small chart: tactics accuracy, blunder rate, and endgame score. We add one line for next month’s focus. You can praise the right thing. You can see change without guessing. This turns you and the coach into one team.
Our coaches are FIDE-certified or titled. They also train in the Debsie way: plain words, kind tone, firm structure. They know how to guide a shy beginner and how to stretch a bold teen. They model the core habit we teach: breathe, scan, plan, move. Students begin to copy this calm rhythm on their own. That is the real win.
We offer early evening slots on weekdays and a calm weekend block. If you miss a class, you watch the recording and join a catch-up lab. You keep momentum. You do not lose a week. Your family dinner stays safe.
2. Local Community Chess Nights in Las Palmas In-Person Evenings
There are friendly club-style evenings where people meet, play long games, and enjoy the room’s buzz. This can be a nice add-on if you already have a study plan. You learn clock use, score keeping, and social play. But sessions are often mixed in level and light on structure. Feedback is brief because coaches must watch many boards.
Why Debsie is better: we give a step-by-step path, level-matched groups, recordings, parent notes, and bi-weekly events—all from home. Use community nights as extra sparring once your base is strong with Debsie.
3. Canary Islands Youth Chess Days Regional Camps or Weekends
Across the islands, youth days or short camps happen from time to time. They bring energy and a change of scene. Kids meet new friends and try drills. These days are fun, but they are not weekly learning. There is little follow-up and little data.
Why Debsie is better: we give steady weekly lessons, tiny homework, clear numbers, and a calm loop of learn–practice–play–review. Build your base with Debsie. Add a youth day as a treat when it fits your week.
4. University or Student Chess Circles Older Teens and Adults
Student circles can offer quiet, long games with real clocks and stronger rivals. This helps older teens or adults who want extra sparring. But these circles are not designed for children and do not follow a curriculum. Teaching is not the focus; games are.
Why Debsie is better: we teach with simple words, clear steps, and level-matched groups. We build habits first, then send you to spar when ready. You can still visit a student meetup later for extra games while your learning core stays online with Debsie.

5. Private Home Tutors Independent, Travel-Based
A private tutor at home can feel personal if the tutor is skilled. But quality varies, travel causes delays, and missed weeks are common. There is rarely a shared dashboard or steady parent report. The plan depends on one person’s notes.
Why Debsie is better: you get personal coaching plus tools—recordings, tiny homework, bi-weekly events, and monthly reports. You remove travel, keep energy, and see real progress without guesswork.
Why Online Chess Training is The Future
The world has changed. School, work, and play all use screens in smart ways. Chess fits this change better than almost any subject. A chessboard is light to show on a screen. Arrows, colors, and clocks make ideas clear.
Voice and chat make questions safe. Records make progress easy to see. This is why online chess is not a trend. It is the best way to learn for most homes in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Time is the first reason. Travel steals focus. When you learn from home, the hour is full of learning, not waiting. A child sits down fresh, listens with a calm mind, and uses the full sixty minutes. Small, steady hours beat rare, long days. Over months, this gap becomes huge.
Match is the second reason. Online, we place each student with others at the same level. This keeps the brain in the “just right” zone—not bored, not lost. The right zone creates fast, honest growth. You feel it after a few weeks: fewer slips, safer kings, clearer plans.
Feedback is the third reason. Every online game and puzzle can be saved. A coach sees the exact move where the habit broke and gives a tiny fix. You try it in your very next game and feel it work. Learning becomes a loop: do, see, fix, do again. This loop is the engine of long-term skill.
Comfort is the fourth reason. A quiet seat, a good screen, and a kind voice make hard tasks feel safe. Shy students type first, then speak. Bold students accept a push because the room is calm. The class breathes. The mind opens.
Reach is the fifth reason. Your coach does not have to live near your street. You can learn from a teacher who has helped many students in many places. You can meet sparring partners with fresh styles. Seeing new ideas often builds a flexible mind. In chess, flexible minds find good moves faster.
How Debsie Leads the Online Chess Training Landscap
Many places can teach moves. Very few can build calm thinkers who plan ahead, manage the clock, and enjoy hard work. This is where Debsie leads. We do the simple things right, every week, with a warm heart and a clear plan.
We begin with a real welcome. Your first meeting is not a test. It is a short, friendly game and a few puzzles so we can see how you think. We listen to your words. We notice your pace.
We see what makes you smile. From this, we place you on the right path: Starter, Builder, Challenger, or Tournament. You know where you are. You know where you are going.
We teach through a steady rhythm: teach, try, reflect. We show one idea with a short story and two clean examples. You try a few puzzles or a guided mini game. We pause at one key moment and ask what you saw and why.
This moment is magic. It turns a tip into a habit. Over weeks, you will feel it: you start to ask yourself the right question at the right time.
We keep homework tiny and daily. Five to ten puzzles. One short drill. Maybe a two-minute clip. That’s it. You can do it even on a busy day. You do not break the chain. Small links make a strong chain. A strong chain makes a strong player.
We host friendly events every two weeks. Pairings are fair. Rounds are smooth. You meet many styles at your level. After the event, you receive a tiny note for one game—two keeps and one fix. You leave the computer with a clear idea you can apply next week. Practice becomes brave, not scary.
We give parents a simple window. At month end, you get a one-page report in plain words. Three numbers—tactics accuracy, blunder rate, endgame score—tell a true story. One sentence shows next month’s focus.

Conclusion
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is full of life. The sea, the schools, the laughter, the rush—it’s a beautiful place to grow up. But between schoolwork, sports, and family, you need learning that fits your rhythm and still gives strong results. Chess can be that gift, if taught with care and structure.
That is why Debsie stands at the top. We do not teach random tricks or fast moves. We teach calm thinking, smart planning, and small daily habits that shape both strong chess and strong character. We teach children to pause before they act, to see what others want, to plan two moves ahead, and to trust their work.
Online learning makes this easy. You save time, energy, and stress. You learn in a calm space at home. Your child joins live classes with caring coaches who speak in simple, warm words. Every class starts on time. Every lesson follows a plan. Every parent sees progress.
Offline classes, clubs, and camps still have their charm. They bring community, boards, and handshakes. But they lack structure, feedback, and flexibility. They depend on rooms, travel, and luck.
Comparisons With Other Chess Schools:
Sayandeep Pal cares deeply about how children learn. He believes every child should feel excited to learn—like opening a new gift. At Debsie, he helps turn lessons into games so kids laugh, think, and grow all at once. He often says, “Learning should never feel like homework. It should feel like a quest!”
Sayandeep reads lots of books about how children learn best. Some of his favorites are The Elephant in the Brain, The Self-Driven Child, and How Children Learn by John Holt. These books help him understand how kids think and feel when they learn new things.
He writes stories, blogs, and lesson ideas that make learning fun and simple. He also talks to teachers and parents about how to bring more play into classrooms. Sayandeep dreams of a world where kids are free to ask “why,” play with ideas, and feel proud of what they discover on their own.
Accomplishments – Club Master in Chess, 2000+ Rating at Chess.com, Has played and secured fifth position in national chess championships.



