Inquiry-Based Unit Planner
Build a unit around student-generated questions and investigation cycles. Students develop their own lines of inquiry, gather evidence, and construct understanding through structured exploration.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
- Print-friendly layout, works on screen or paper
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When to use this template
- Science units built around testable questions and experimental investigation
- Social studies units where students investigate historical or current events from multiple perspectives
- ELA research units where students develop and pursue their own lines of inquiry
- Any unit where you want to significantly increase student agency and ownership of learning
- When you have flexibility in how students demonstrate understanding
Template sections
Inquiry works when students are wrestling with questions they actually care about, and when there is enough structure that the wrestling leads somewhere. This planner helps you design an inquiry unit that gives students real agency in their investigation while ensuring the content standards are covered and the learning is visible.
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For Science
Inquiry Unit pairs well with lab work: the structured phases keep inquiry focused while leaving room for student-driven investigation.
For Social Studies
Inquiry Unit supports source analysis and debate by giving students structured time for evidence gathering and discussion.
For ELA
For literacy lessons, Inquiry Unit helps scaffold close reading and analytical writing with clear thinking phases.
About the Inquiry Unit framework
Inquiry-based learning puts student questions at the center of learning. Rather than following a teacher-directed sequence of content delivery, students investigate questions they find genuinely interesting, with the teacher serving as a guide who provides structure, resources, and feedback.
The spectrum of inquiry: Inquiry is not all-or-nothing. Structured inquiry gives students a question and the steps to investigate it. Guided inquiry gives students a question and lets them figure out how to investigate. Open inquiry lets students generate their own questions. This planner supports all three approaches, and most teachers use a mix within a single unit.
The inquiry cycle: Good inquiry units follow a recognizable pattern: orientation (creating curiosity and building background), conceptualization (generating questions), investigation (gathering evidence), conclusion (making sense of findings), and discussion (sharing and defending). This planner maps the arc across your unit timeline.
Making inquiry manageable: The biggest barrier to inquiry teaching is the fear of losing control of content coverage. The key insight is that students who are genuinely investigating a question learn content more deeply and retain it longer than students who receive the same content passively. Inquiry does not skip content; it situates it.
Evidence and documentation: Inquiry units need explicit structures for students to document their process: research notes, claim-evidence reasoning charts, investigation logs, or digital portfolios. Without documentation, inquiry looks like free time. With it, the thinking becomes visible.
Student-generated questions: The most engaging inquiry units include at least some student-generated questions. Even if the overarching investigation is teacher-directed, allowing students to identify sub-questions they want to pursue significantly increases buy-in.
This planner walks you through designing an inquiry arc that is both structured enough to be manageable and open enough to generate genuine student investigation.
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