Where Coding Lives Inside PYP Units (and Where It Doesn’t)
Week 5 of our “How We Organize Ourselves” unit, my Year 4 class was diagramming school systems when I rolled out a grid map and arrows. Half the room rushed to loops, the other half debated which way was “up.” The moment reminded me: in PYP, coding belongs when it deepens understanding of the central idea—here, that systems help communities function. Programming is the lens, not the destination.
Misfit I see all the time: resources that are on-topic (they say “algorithms” and “debugging”) but ignore PYP bones—no key concepts (function, connection, causation), no learner profile ties, no inquiry questions. A second misfit: syntax-first tutorials that treat eight-year-olds like junior developers and skip conceptual play. I use “does this push our lines of inquiry?” as my first cut. If the answer’s no, it waits until choice time. When I need fresh prompts that still feel PYP, I skim community ideas and keep the ones I can twist into our units inside ClassPods.