Curriculum

Inquiry-Based Learning — Where Curiosity Soars

At Pegasus, curiosity isn't something children simply pick up — it's part of who they are. We make that instinct the fuel for learning and confidence.

Curiosity is hardwired into us. Every ‘why?’ and ‘how?’ your child asks is a natural instinct for understanding the world. At Pegasus, we embrace this instinct — our classrooms are designed to inspire children to wonder deeply, ask boldly, and build their own meaning. We don't just give answers; we guide children to explore, investigate and create knowledge for themselves.

The approach

What is inquiry-based learning?

Inquiry-based learning is an approach where children lead the questions, investigations and discoveries. Rather than passively absorbing information, children learn to:

  • Ask meaningful questions
  • Explore hands-on solutions
  • Test ideas and reflect on results
  • Communicate their discoveries to others

Inquiry exists on a spectrum — from guided inquiry, where children explore a teacher-provided question with some structure, to open inquiry, where they generate their own questions and experiment freely.

In the classroom

Inquiry through the learning cycle

  1. 1

    Engage

    Spark curiosity with thought-provoking questions or phenomena.

  2. 2

    Explore

    Hands-on investigation and experimentation.

  3. 3

    Construct

    Draw conclusions, reflect and organise ideas.

  4. 4

    Extend & Apply

    Use new insights in fresh contexts.

Our practice

How Pegasus brings inquiry to life

Teachers as facilitators

Educators observe children's interests and pose questions that stimulate thinking — intervening just enough to deepen exploration while letting children lead.

Integrated, thematic inquiry

Each theme spans literacy, numeracy, science, creative arts and social-emotional skills. A ‘Water Cycle’ theme might mean measuring rainwater, drawing clouds and storytelling.

Environment as provocation

Provocation corners, loose parts and natural materials encourage children to pause, notice, experiment and revisit their ideas.

Documentation & reflection

Learning journals and portfolios let children track their questions and discoveries, building a bridge between home and school.

Time to ponder and persist

Daily inquiry windows ensure exploration isn't rushed. Children learn to test, fail, rethink and try again — there are no wrong answers, only insights.

Confidence through discovery

When children feel seen, heard and supported, they take charge of their own cognitive growth and soar with confidence.

Lifelong skills

Why inquiry-based learning matters

Through inquiry, children don't just prepare for school — they prepare for life.

Ask questions without fear

Think critically and creatively

Solve problems collaboratively

Build self-confidence and emotional intelligence

Ready to begin?

See Pegasus for yourself

Book a free, no-obligation school tour, or start your enrolment enquiry today.