The Power of Questions: Nurturing thinking in an inquiry classroom

What makes learning meaningful?

Is it the information students remember? Is it the answers they write in an examination in a limited amount of time? Or is it something deeper- the ability to think, question, and make sense of the world around them?

In an inquiry-based classroom, particularly within the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP), learning begins with questions of different shapes and sizes and not just a predefined set of facts to be learnt. Questions are the engine of inquiry. They stimulate curiosity, guide investigation, challenge assumptions, and ultimately help students construct conceptual understanding.

However, an important misconception about inquiry is that every question must be profound or philosophical. Effective inquiry classrooms value questions at different levels. Some questions simply help students observe. Others prompt analysis. Still others push students to form conceptual generalisations. Together, these layers of questioning support the gradual development of thinking.

Read More: A Guide to Understanding the IB (DP & MYP) Curriculum

At its heart, inquiry is about creating learning experiences where students are encouraged to wonder:

Why does this happen?

How does this work?

What might this mean beyond this situation?

These are the questions that move learning from facts to understanding. 

Educational research on concept-based inquiry suggests that inquiry learning often begins by engaging students emotionally and intellectually, activating their prior knowledge, and inviting their initial questions before deeper investigation begins. In the MYP classroom, this phase is essential because it creates the conditions for meaningful learning rather than passive reception of information. 

A simple example illustrates how questioning can spark thinking. 

Recently, our MY1 students visited Dakshina Chitra, the living heritage museum in Chennai that showcases traditional homes and cultural practices from across South India. Rather than experiencing the visit as a passive tour, students were provided with a worksheet designed around guiding questions. These prompts asked them to observe details carefully: 

  • What materials are used to build these houses?
  • Why might homes in different regions look different?
  • What similarities and differences do you notice across architectural styles? 

At first glance, these questions appear straightforward. Yet they encourage students to move beyond observation to analysis and interpretation. As students explored the houses, discussions began to emerge. Some noticed that roof structures varied across regions. Others wondered whether climate influenced building materials. Gradually, students began connecting their observations to broader ideas about environment, culture, and adaptation. 

In this way, structured questioning became the starting point for conceptual understanding, a central goal of the MYP framework. 

As students progress through the programme, the nature of questioning evolves. In earlier years, teachers often provide more structured inquiry to guide thinking. Over time, students begin to take increasing ownership of the inquiry process. 

Read More: Community Project Session for IB MYP 3 at Shiv Nadar School Faridabad 

This shift becomes particularly visible in MY3 through the Community Project. Here, students are encouraged to identify issues that matter to them within their communities. Instead of receiving predetermined research questions, students frame their own inquiries: 

  • What challenge in our community needs attention?
  • Why does this issue exist?
  • What action could help address it? 

These questions reflect a deeper level of thinking because students are defining problems, exploring perspectives, and planning action. They go beyond simply gathering information. In this process, the teacher's role shifts from delivering knowledge to facilitating inquiry. 

Similarly, in science classrooms, students often design their own investigations. A teacher might begin with a broad conceptual question such as: What factors influence plant growth? Students then refine this into testable inquiries, designing experiments, collecting data, and reflecting on results. Through this process, they develop key Approaches to Learning (ATL) skills such as research, critical thinking, and self-management, along with disciplinary knowledge. Others help them organize their thinking and identify patterns. 

Read More:  Shiv Nadar School Noida is now an IB MYP Authorised School 

What becomes evident across these experiences is that questions guide every stage of learning. Some questions help students engage with a topic. Some help them investigate evidence.Eventually, students begin forming generalisations- statements of understanding that connect concepts and can be applied beyond a single example. When students reach this stage, they are developing ideas that can transfer to new contexts, which is beyond the recall of information without a context. 

This is one of the most powerful goals of the IB philosophy: helping learners build knowledge that is transferable and meaningful. This also helps in furthering our commitment to lifelong learning at Shiv Nadar School

Yet perhaps the most significant shift in an inquiry classroom occurs when students themselves become the questioners. Instead of waiting for the teacher’s prompts, they begin to ask: 

  • Is this always true?
  • What evidence supports this idea?
  • Could there be another explanation? 

These moments signal something important. They show that students are developing agency as learners, instead of merely participating in lessons as passive listeners. This is the goal of our MYP classrooms. 

In the end, the success of an inquiry classroom may not be measured by how many answers students produce, but by the quality of the questions they learn to ask to pursue meaningful journeys responding to those questions. When classrooms nurture curiosity, encourage reflection, and value thoughtful questioning, they cultivate learners who are prepared for the complexities of the world beyond school, beyond any single examination. 

Perhaps, then, the most important question we can ask ourselves as educators and caregivers is this: 

Are we creating spaces in the classrooms and outside where curiosity thrives? Are we modelling the thinking process that we want our children to embody? 

Because when students learn to ask meaningful questions, they begin to see learning as a journey of discovery of their own selves and the world around them.  

2026-03-19