Where Geography Sits in PYP: Themes, Strands, and the Gaps
Week 3 of our Year 4 unit under “Sharing the Planet,” my class compared schoolyard shade maps at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. The conversation flowed—microclimates, tree placement, and who gets the sunny bench. This is where PYP geography lives for us: inside a transdisciplinary theme, anchored to a central idea, and pulling from social studies strands like human and natural environments and resources and the environment. On-topic resources are everywhere, but many miss the PYP fit. A glossy biome slideshow can be accurate yet still ignore key concepts like connection and causation, or skip action and reflection entirely.
The fix is to start from your central idea and lines of inquiry, then choose tasks that make students investigate local places and human choices. I don’t mind a fact page, but only if it feeds a map, a field sketch, a data table, or an interview plan. I keep a short list of truly adaptable tasks in the community section for geography, then tweak them to our context. ClassPods just holds my notes; the alignment work—matching strands, concepts, and action—happens in planning with my team.