Taking Action
Taking Action is the stage where learners use what they have understood to make a difference, share ideas, solve problems, or change something in a thoughtful way.
Use learning to make a difference
In inquiry, learning should not stop at understanding. Taking action means using knowledge, skills, and attitudes to respond in a real way to what has been learned.
Use question starters
Good action starts with clear purpose. Use these question starters to think about what change you want, who it is for, and how you will know it helped.
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What change do I want to make?
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Who will this action help?
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Why is this action worth doing?
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What steps do I need to take?
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What tools or people can support me?
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How will I know if my action helped?
Ways to take action well
These tips help you move from good intentions to realistic, meaningful action that connects clearly to your inquiry.
Start with purpose
Ask what change you want to make, who it is for, and why this action is worth doing.
Keep it realistic
Choose an action that fits the time, resources, audience, and age of the learners involved.
Action can be big or small
It might be a personal choice, a shared project, a new habit, a message to others, or a practical improvement.
Connect to learning
The strongest action grows naturally from the inquiry instead of being added at the end just to complete the page.
Helpful action tools
Use simple structures and routines to help you plan, check impact, and reflect on your action so it stays connected to learning.
Action plan
Use a simple chart to record your goal, specific actions, steps, resources, timeframe, and how you will measure success.
Impact check
After action, ask: What happened? What changed, even in a small way? What evidence do we have?
Reflection questions
Use guided questions to think about what worked, what did not, and what you would do next.
Sharing template
Plan how to share your action with others: audience, message, format, and timing.
Activities to take action
These quick ideas can help you move from learning to action in a personal, shared, creative, or practical way.
Personal choice
Identify one small habit or behaviour you can change because of what you learned.
Class project
Work with a group to improve something in your classroom, school, or local community.
Teach someone
Create a short lesson, guide, or poster to share what you learned with younger pupils or peers.
Advocacy message
Write a message, letter, or presentation to persuade others about an issue you care about.
Check your action
After action, ask: What happened? What changed, even in a small way? What evidence do we have? A good action stage helps you see whether your action was effective, meaningful, and connected to your inquiry—and what you would do next.
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