How I make ‘physics’ work inside an IB PYP unit

By Week 4 of our How the World Works unit, my Year 4s were bent over cardboard ramps, arguing about whether “heavier means faster.” I’d planned for curiosity, not chaos, so I paused us and asked for evidence, not louder voices. That’s the PYP way I try to keep front and center: concept first, vocabulary in context, and students showing understanding through action. When I search for IB · PYP physics resources, I’m usually filtering out worksheets built for secondary formulas or one-off STEM crafts that look great but don’t build toward a central idea.

I plan with the PYP planner open—central idea, key concepts, lines of inquiry, ATL skills—then build experiences around that spine. ClassPods helps me corral my messy drafts into something teachable and reusable across classes, but the alignment work is still on me. If it doesn’t move students toward conceptual transfer, it’s window dressing. Below is how I judge fit, a full lesson I’ve taught on forces, a rubric you can copy tomorrow, and notes on mixed-language classes and pacing without losing the inquiry heartbeat.

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Where physics really lives in IB · PYP

Monday of Week 2, my Year 4s started our forces inquiry with a walk around the playground. No formulas—just noticing pushes, pulls, and friction in the wild. That’s the fit issue I keep seeing when I hunt for IB · PYP physics resources: lots of “speed = distance/time” sheets that ignore central ideas, and slick demos with no concept map back to causation or change. In PYP, physics usually breathes inside How the World Works, and it’s transdisciplinary: maths for measuring, language for explaining, design for building.

What misses the mark? Resources that: (1) assess recall instead of performance of understanding; (2) front-load vocabulary without context; (3) treat learning as a lesson, not a unit of inquiry; (4) skip reflection. The stuff that works keeps the central idea steady and lets evidence of learning show up in journals, models, photos, and peer talk. When I need inspiration, I skim the science community library and adapt, then track what we change in ClassPods so the unit improves each year.

Quick alignment checks I run before I teach

Last Thursday after dismissal, our PYP planning huddle combed through a “forces and motion” pack someone found. We don’t just ask if it’s on-topic—we check if it’s PYP-fit. I keep a sticky note of tests on my laptop and run them fast before printing anything.

  • Central idea match: can I write one clear sentence the tasks actually support?
  • Key concepts: do activities surface causation and change, or just facts?
  • Lines of inquiry: are there at least two authentic entry points for students?
  • ATL skills: is there explicit space for research, thinking, and communication?
  • Assessment: can I collect evidence beyond a quiz—photos, measurements, reflections?
  • Vocabulary: is it stage-appropriate and introduced through experience first?
  • Transfer: does it connect to home, playground, or other subjects this term?

If something passes most checks, I’ll test-generate a draft sequence and exit tickets in a sandbox, then tune it with our planner open. ClassPods is useful here because I can keep the concept language consistent across lessons so the throughline doesn’t wobble.

A 60‑minute PYP lesson that lands ‘force’ and fairness

On Tuesday, Week 3, I ran our Toy Car Ramp Challenge with Year 4. The central idea was “Forces cause changes in motion,” with causation and function as key concepts. The named worked example: measuring how ramp height affects distance while keeping tests fair.

Objective: students explain how a change in height changes motion and justify why it’s a fair test.

  • 0–7 min Starter: Show two slow‑mo clips of cars on different ramps. Quick talk: “What changed? What stayed the same?”
  • 7–20 min Main (Part A): Groups build a 30 cm ramp, release car three times, record distances. Introduce “fair test” variables.
  • 20–35 min Main (Part B): Raise to 45 cm, repeat. Compare means; sketch a simple graph.
  • 35–47 min Formative check: Gallery walk; students place a dot sticker on a poster that best explains “why higher = further.” I note misconceptions.
  • 47–58 min Main (Part C): Groups revise one step to improve fairness and annotate why.
  • 58–60 min Plenary: 30‑second exit slip: “Because…, the car went…; next time I’ll…”

I keep the exit slips together and spin them into the next lesson’s starter; if you want a head start building a pack around this sequence, you can spin one up here. ClassPods lets me stash the video clips and slides with the notes so I’m not reinventing the wheel.

Copy-and-adapt rubric for a PYP forces inquiry

I used this rubric in Week 5 as we wrapped the ramp investigations. It’s tight enough for quick marking and open enough for student voice. Swap language to match your central idea.

  • Conceptual understanding (causation/change): Proficient—explains how a variable changes motion with evidence from tests; Developing—states what happened with limited why; Extending—links to another context (playground, cycling) with clear reasoning.
  • Scientific skills (planning/measuring): Proficient—identifies and controls at least two variables, measures consistently; Developing—controls one variable, measurements inconsistent; Extending—suggests an improvement and justifies it.
  • Communication (vocabulary/representation): Proficient—uses “force,” “friction,” “height,” and simple graphs accurately; Developing—uses some terms, representation partly accurate; Extending—adds labels/units and a concise caption.
  • Reflection (metacognition): Proficient—states what changed in thinking; Developing—describes activity only; Extending—explains how feedback/data shaped a next step.

Student prompt stems: “I changed… so…,” “My evidence shows…,” “To be fair, we…,” “Next time, I would….” I drop this directly into ClassPods as a checklist so feedback is fast; if you want to generate a matching student sheet and teacher copy, you can sketch both in minutes using a draft builder.

Language, pacing, and extending into home inquiry

Wednesday’s double with my mixed Year 3/4 (half are new-to-English) reminded me to plan talk first, text later. We co-created a bilingual word bank (home language + English), paired students for “say it, show it, sketch it,” and used photo sequences before any writing. Sentence frames like “I think ___ because I saw ___” lowered the bar to join the conversation without lowering the concept.

For pacing, I split the build‑measure‑reflect loop across two lessons and run quick 1:1 conferences while groups reset ramps. Teacher review stays light: I collect two photos, one graph, and one reflection per group—enough for evidence, not a paper mountain. For revision/homework, I assign a Forces Scavenger Hunt at home: find three pushes/pulls, take photos, and caption them using our frames (home language allowed, English preferred).

If you’re mapping resources across a team and need to sort budget in advance, I’d check the details on pricing so nobody’s surprised later; I still keep most artifacts inside the same workflow so planning time stays sane.

Try the workflow

Physics for IB · PYP on ClassPods.

Open the right workflow, build a first draft fast, and keep the review step inside the same flow.

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