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Anyone willing to coach me for free?

I’m only 15 and I am setting a goal to become a CM at the end of my high school years which is 4 years. I had played in scholastic tournaments and won pretty much every round, not because I’m good, it’s because everyone else is worse than me. I am not able to find a job at the moment as I don’t have a working paper and won’t be able to get one until school starts, hence, why I am asking for someone to teach me for free. I prefer someone that’s rated 2000 and titles, but if you can coach well that’s also great.

P.S. I know I’m asking for a lot here.
I don't want to sound discouraging about your enthusiasm for learning, but to improve at chess nothing will help you more than intense independent learning about the essential elements of the game: how to develop your pieces, how to detect critical positions and how to calculate variations according to the basic principles, these three questions correspond respectively to the concept that chess is a matter of intuition, preparation and calculation, as Jacob Aagaard explains in his literary work 'Excelling at Chess', surely a coach can guide you through some schemes to aid you the assimilate the topics, but at the end of the day like Kasparov would say, the work is done by one's own will to improve, so basically if you want to optimize your understanding of those topics the best you can do is organize a schedule where you can dedicate to exercise, first: checkmate patterns and endgame studies; second: opening principles/development: tempo, space and harmony of the pieces; and third: tactical puzzles; of course, there's a lot more to this like physical [good nutrition, workout] and psychological [mental health] preparation, but the whole chess work is basically that. Look up some good brief books or instructive videos on each of these topics and get your schedule in order, then summarize what to you are the most important facts which you can apply in practice and don't forget to have fun while studying/playing chess, it doesn't have to be a boring thing if you enjoy what you do, nevertheless if you can find anyone willing to coach you for free then I wish you good luck! But have in mind those elements of chess for a good study: intuition, preparation and calculation. I'm also studying the game, but the inspiration to improve doesn't come from anyone else than oneself, but also consider to not distract yourself and focus on the game for a good improvement, then you can look up other specific things like time management in your games and have a thorough understanding of chess, like a quote from Tigran Petrosian says: 'The best coach of the chess player is oneself', from a guy who got to world champion studying mainly Nimzowitsch's My System and Chess Praxis I believe his saying is trustworthy. But I don't recommend Nimzowitsch's books if you're still a beginner, instead, get a good collection of master games from a player that you admire the most [Alekhine, Fischer, Kasparov for example], a book of endgame studies [Silman's Endgame Manual is a considerable reference, but any that teaches the most basic endgames is alright], and a book of tactical motifs and checkmate patterns, there's plenty of these in print but even if you want something more didactic my recommendation is chessable.com's digital books, it's a great tool to learn. Have great fun with chess!:D
@KaosAquarius
As someone who wants to improve in chess and is having difficulty doing it alone, I was surprised at your statement that Petrosian "got to world champion studying mainly Nimzowitsch's My System and Chess Praxis". Petrosian became a CM because he went to a chess school from age 12 to 17, studying under Archil Ebralidze. After only one year of coaching, he drew a GM in a simul. I doubt anyone could duplicate that feat by coaching themselves for a year. It was only as an adult and a master that he began coaching himself.
Interesting history, I wasn't aware that he had been studying chess with a master in his teenage, but I knew that he had been reading Nimzowitsch's books since his childhood [www.chess.com/blog/Spektrowski/tigran-petrosian-foreword-to-aron-nimzowitschs-quotchess-praxisquot-1979]; the idea is that the will to improve comes from the chess-player, and if it worked for Petrosian then I guess self-coaching should work for anyone without the support of a paid coach but with the enthusiasm to improve, another example of this would be Fischer whose love for the game got him to improve considerably since being a kid, and his only masters were written chess lessons and commented games from chess literature. But thanks for your clarification on Petrosian's biographical information, there might be a reason why he didn't keep with a coach, but that's off-topic and I think the idea explains itself.
I agree that anyone who is a respectable teacher will not do it for free. I myself have been looking for a way to deal something. Like trying to train and offering percentages of prize winnings and even payment plans for strong masters to tutor me, however none take it up. I completely understand that. I personally tutor for my local area and I don't do it for free.

Some of the tutors here offer their services inside the instructors section. Some of them are even better than my rates. I think if you are serious, at least shopping for a good tutor is a good investment. But don't just pick anyone. You have to connect with them. And they have to give you something that consistently questions your ability.

Hope this helps.
Hey @ModernNoob - sign up at ChessPathways.com - maybe Blake will repeat his recent offer to do some personal analysis and guidance for a ridiculously low price (peanuts really compared to what you'd pay a coach).
No human has ever done anything without thinking that it benefited him.

That being said, you can post games and many people will offer advice. It's the efficient, but it's (mostly) useful feedback.
Some people do things for free because they derive some satisfaction just by doing that. Many strong players will analyse with weaker players after a game.
You can use Stockfish as your coach, helping you to analyse games you lost. Especially the learn from your mistakes feature here on this site is helpful.
You can use the tactics trainer here on this site to improve your tactics.
You can use the table bases here on this site to help you study endgames, especially rook endings.

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