
Student-led investigation of self-generated questions
Inquiry Circle
Small groups develop their own research questions about a topic, then investigate using provided sources and materials. Each group follows an inquiry cycle: question → investigate → discuss → conclude → share. The teacher facilitates rather than directs. Develops research skills, curiosity, and intellectual independence.
What is Inquiry Circle?
Inquiry-based learning has roots that stretch back to John Dewey's turn-of-the-century advocacy for learning-by-doing, but the specific Inquiry Circle format, a structured protocol for collaborative student-driven research, was developed more recently from the literature on literature circles and reading groups. The basic structure draws on the insight that the skills of genuine inquiry, forming questions, evaluating sources, synthesizing information, reaching conclusions, and recognizing the limits of those conclusions, are developed through practice, not through being told about them.
The driving question is the intellectual engine of any Inquiry Circle. A good driving question is genuinely open, not a question with an obvious answer that any prepared student could answer in five minutes, but also bounded enough to be tractable within the available time. The question should require synthesis across multiple sources, should connect to the curriculum's learning objectives, and should be genuinely interesting to the students who will pursue it. When students have some role in generating or refining the driving question, their investment in the inquiry that follows is significantly higher.
The 'What do we think we know?' phase before research begins is a consistently undervalued step that serves multiple purposes. It activates prior knowledge, which gives students a framework for making sense of new information rather than encountering it as disconnected data. It surfaces misconceptions, which the inquiry can then challenge rather than simply adding to existing confusion. And it establishes a baseline that students can compare to their conclusions at the end of the inquiry, making intellectual development visible.
Source evaluation is the literacy skill that Inquiry Circle is uniquely positioned to develop, because genuine inquiry requires genuine evaluation: students can't answer their driving question well if they accept any source uncritically. Who wrote this? For what purpose? How do they know what they claim to know? Is this consistent with what other credible sources say? Are there sources that say something different, and if so, why? These evaluation questions are the habits of mind that distinguish informed inquiry from Googling.
The synthesis rounds, regular pauses during the research phase where groups share what they've found, are what prevent inquiry from becoming siloed parallel research. When each student researches a different aspect of the question without regular integration, groups end up with a collection of information rather than a synthesis. The synthesis rounds ask: How does what you found connect to what I found? Where do our sources agree and where do they differ? What gaps are emerging? These integration questions are where inquiry becomes genuinely collaborative rather than merely simultaneous.
The public product (presenting the inquiry's conclusions to an audience beyond the teacher) is what gives inquiry its authentic communicative dimension. Students who know they will present to a panel of community members, publish in a class blog, or present to a younger class invest differently in their research than students writing only for the teacher. The public dimension also requires students to translate their understanding into forms accessible to non-expert audiences, an intellectual translation task that requires deeper understanding than the research itself.
How to Run Inquiry Circle: Step-by-Step
Introduce the Umbrella Theme
6 min
Present a broad, compelling topic (e.g., Ecosystems or Civil Rights) and use a 'hook' to spark curiosity and initial questions.
Form Interest-Based Groups
6 min
Have students brainstorm specific sub-questions and cluster them into groups of 3-5 based on shared research interests.
Establish Group Roles
6 min
Assign or let students choose specific roles such as Facilitator, Resource Manager, Note-taker, and Synthesizer to ensure individual accountability.
Conduct Guided Research
7 min
Provide students with access to vetted databases, books, and media, while teaching mini-lessons on how to evaluate source credibility.
Synthesize and Create
6 min
Instruct groups to organize their findings into a coherent format, such as a digital presentation, infographic, or model, that answers their original inquiry.
Share and Teach Others
6 min
Facilitate a 'knowledge marketplace' or presentation session where groups teach their findings to the rest of the class.
Reflect on the Process
6 min
Conclude with an individual and group reflection on what was learned about the topic and how the inquiry process could be improved.
When to Use Inquiry Circle in the Classroom
- Student-driven exploration
- Developing research methodology
- Cultivating curiosity and ownership
- Differentiating by interest
Subject Fit
Common variants
Guided inquiry circle
Teacher provides the question and the sources; students work through interpretation together. Scaffolded entry to inquiry.
Open inquiry circle
Students generate the question from a stimulus, then research and argue toward an answer. Higher agency, more time.
Research Evidence for Inquiry Circle
Harvey, S., Daniels, H. (2009, Heinemann (Book))
The study demonstrates that small-group inquiry significantly increases student engagement and reading comprehension by allowing students to pursue authentic questions within a structured social framework.
Cervetti, G. N., Barber, J., Dorph, R., Pearson, P. D., & Goldschmidt, P. G. (2012, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 49(5), 631-658)
Situating literacy instruction within inquiry-based investigations driven by essential questions leads to significant gains in both reading comprehension and writing quality.
Guthrie, J. T., Wigfield, A., et al. (2004, Journal of Educational Psychology, 96(3), 403-423)
Integrating inquiry cycles with collaborative work leads to higher levels of situational interest and significantly better performance on standardized comprehension assessments compared to traditional instruction.
Generate a Mission with Inquiry Circle
Use Flip Education to create a complete Inquiry Circle lesson plan, aligned to your curriculum and ready to use in class.