Showing posts with label Inquiry based Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inquiry based Education. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 September 2025

The International Baccalaureate

 

Education has always moved like a river, carrying traditions and ideas. In India the Gurukula system made learning a way of life. Students stayed with their teacher, practised discipline, learnt values, and absorbed knowledge in daily living. In Rome, Italy, Maria Montessori opened her first Casa dei Bambini in 1907. She allowed children to explore freely. Her classrooms invited them to touch, move, and discover. Both Gurukula and Montessori remind us that true education is not about collecting facts. It is about shaping a complete human being.

By the middle of the twentieth century, the world was unsettled. Families travelled across borders. Children who moved from one country to another often-lost years of study. Each nation had its own syllabus and examinations. In Geneva a group of teachers asked a daring question. Could there be one shared passport for learning. This question planted the seed of the International Baccalaureate. The organisation was registered in Geneva in 1968. Two years later twelve schools in ten countries conducted the first IB Diploma examinations.

The Story

  • Began with the needs of children who moved between countries
  • Registered in Geneva in 1968
  • First Diploma exams in 1970 with twelve schools
  • Drawn from the ideas of John Dewey, Jean Piaget, A S Neill, and Kurt Hahn

The Philosophy

The IB treats the learner as an explorer. Students are guided to ask questions, make connections, and think deeply. The aim is to form thoughtful and responsible individuals who can live with respect for difference and with openness to the wider world.

What it is today?

The IB has grown into a complete pathway for students from early childhood to the end of school years. There are four programmes, each with its own rhythm. Together they form a journey from the first questions of a child to the reflections of a young adult.

 

Programme

Age group

Teaching & learning methods

Key features

Primary Years Programme (PYP)

3 – 12 years

Inquiry based, concept driven, transdisciplinary learning

Big themes like Who we are or, How the world works guide lessons. Focus on curiosity, agency, and action. Skills such as thinking, research, and communication are built naturally.

Middle Years Programme (MYP)

11 – 16 years

Inquiry continues, interdisciplinary approach, global contexts

Students learn through real world themes such as community, sustainability, identity. Strong emphasis on personal project in final year. Assessment is continuous with feedback.

Diploma Programme (DP)

16 – 19 years

Depth in subjects + reflection, project based, independent research

Students take six subjects plus three core elements: Theory of Knowledge, Extended Essay, and Creativity, Activity, Service. Inquiry is balanced with rigour. Both formative and summative assessment are used.

Career related Programme (CP)

16 – 19 years

Blend of academic and vocational learning, applied projects, internships

Students take IB subjects along with career studies. Core focuses on personal and professional skills, ethical reflection, and real-world application.

 

The Digital Question

The IB was born in a time when classrooms were opening up and teachers were seeking new methods. Today children live in a digital world where information appears without pause. The question is no longer how to access knowledge but how to filter and use it wisely. The IB addresses this by giving importance to reflection, good judgment, and the ability to ask questions (genuinely!). Technology provides speed. The IB reminds learners to balance that speed with depth and pause.

My Reflection

From the Gurukula courtyards, to Montessori’s first classroom in Rome, to the international halls of Geneva, education has always moved with the rhythm of its time. The International Baccalaureate is the voice of our present age. It encourages young people to question, to search for meaning, and to engage with the world around them.

In my view the IB is a strong and thoughtful model. It prepares students for a life that is fast and uncertain, yet it also reminds them to think deeply and act with balance. At the same time, it has its limits. The cost makes it unreachable for many families. Its international emphasis can sometimes leave little space for local roots. Not every school has the resources or trained teachers to carry its vision fully.

Even with these challenges, the IB has created a system that gives children confidence, builds resilience, and opens their minds to many perspectives. It is not a replacement for older traditions but another stream in the river of education. What may come next could be another vision of learning born in India, one that draws from our civilisational heritage while speaking to the needs of a global future.

 

References

  • International Baccalaureate Organization. The History of the IB. 2017 URL: https://www.ibo.org/
  • Montessori, Maria. The Montessori Method. 1912, URL: https://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/montessori/method/method.html 
  • Altekar, A S. Education in Ancient India. 1944 URL: https://archive.org/details/educationinancie032398mbp