Inside PYP: biology belongs to the unit, not a chapter
Last Monday in Week 5 of our Sharing the Planet unit, my Year 4s brought in photos of snails from the courtyard and declared we had a “snail problem.” That moment only works if biology sits inside the unit’s central idea and lines of inquiry—here, interdependence and limited resources—not as a standalone “Living Things” worksheet set. In PYP, the science strand is about constructing understanding through concepts like connection and causation, then asking, “So what’s our responsibility?”
Here’s where many on-topic resources miss: they teach parts of a plant beautifully, but never invite students to test function or consider change over time. They’ll list “habitat,” but skip student-generated questions, action, or reflection. I look for provocations, not instructions; iterative investigations, not one-and-done labs; and success criteria that value explanation and evidence.
When I hunt for something to adapt, I start with transdisciplinary fit: does it speak to the unit’s central idea in generalizable language, or is it locked to a narrow fact set? If I need a springboard, I skim community science materials and park promising leads in the library so I can remix them around our lines of inquiry.