PYP Inquiry Cycle

Tuning In

Tuning in is the part of inquiry where you begin with curiosity. You explore what you already know, notice what stands out, ask questions, and get ready to investigate a topic more deeply.

Start with curiosity

Tuning in helps you connect with a topic before you dive into research. It is the stage where you gather your first thoughts, activate prior knowledge, and begin to shape meaningful questions that will guide the rest of your inquiry.

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Use question starters

Good inquiry often begins with simple but thoughtful prompts. These question starters can help you move from a broad topic to a more focused and interesting line of thinking.

Question starter

What do I already know about this topic?

Question starter

What do I notice first?

Question starter

What surprises me?

Question starter

What am I curious about?

Question starter

What do I want to find out next?

Question starter

Why might this matter?

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Ways to tune in well

These tips help you slow down, notice more, and begin inquiry with stronger thinking habits.

Start with what you already know

Think about your own experiences, words, examples, and memories before you search for new information.

Notice, think, wonder

Look closely at a photo, object, video, text, or question prompt. First notice details, then think about what they might mean, and finally wonder about what you want to explore.

Ask open questions

Strong inquiry questions usually lead to more than one possible answer. They help you explore instead of ending the thinking too quickly.

Be curious, not rushed

Tuning in is about opening up ideas. You do not need the final answer yet — you are building interest, direction, and purpose.

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Helpful inquiry tools

Use simple structures and routines to help your thinking become visible and easier to build on.

Question Maker

Use question stems like what, why, how, when, and what if to turn a topic into deeper inquiry questions.

KWL Grid

Record what you Know, what you Want to know, and later what you Learned.

See, Think, Wonder

A simple routine to help you observe carefully and turn noticing into good questions.

Mind Map

Put the topic in the centre and branch out with words, ideas, connections, and new questions.

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Activities to get started

These quick ideas can help you begin an inquiry lesson in an active and thoughtful way.

Image prompt

Choose one powerful image connected to your unit. Write three things you notice, two things you think, and one thing you wonder.

Object inquiry

Look at a real object linked to the topic. Describe it carefully, then ask questions about where it came from, how it is used, and why it matters.

Quick partner talk

Talk with a partner for one minute each: what do you already know, and what are you most curious to explore?

Question wall

Add your questions to a shared class wall or board so the inquiry can grow from everyone’s ideas.

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Check your starting point

Before moving on, ask yourself: What do I already understand? What am I most curious about now? Which question feels strongest? A good tuning-in stage leaves you ready to investigate with more direction and interest.

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