Home Good Teaching Transform Your Classroom with a Wonder Wall

Transform Your Classroom with a Wonder Wall

by Diana Benner
Image of a wonder wall

A wonder wall is a transformative classroom tool that turns student curiosity into daily learning experiences. Wonder walls have the power to not only spark student’s curiosity, but also to get students to think critically and take charge of their own learning.

Whether you teach kindergarten or high school, a wonder wall can bring learning to life. Let’s explore how to set one up, keep it engaging, and use it to spark deeper learning in your classroom.

What is a Wonder Wall?

A wonder wall is a dedicated space where students post their questions about classroom topics. The space serves as a visual representation of student-driven learning. It encourages inquiry, discussion, and exploration. It can be a physical bulletin board, a digital tool, or a combination of both. The goal of a wall is to cultivate a classroom culture where curiosity leads the way.

Why Use a Wonder Wall?

There are many benefits of using wonder walls in your classroom. Let’s explore some.

  • Encourages curiosity: Students ask questions about topics that interest them, driving intrinsic motivation.
  • Builds Critical Thinking: Students think deeply, research answers, and make connections.
  • Supports Student Voice and Engagement: Every student has a place to contribute, ensuring that all voices are valued.
  • Promotes collaboration: Students share ideas, debate answers, and research together.

How to Set Up a Wonder Wall in Your Classroom

1. Choose a Space

  • Physical Wonder Wall: Use a bulletin board, whiteboard, or designated wall space where students can post their questions using sticky notes or index cards.
  • Digital Wonder Wall: Use tools like Padlet, Canva, or Google Slides where students can type their questions.

2. Introduce the Concept

  • Explain that the Wonder Wall is a place for all kinds of questions—big or small, related to the curriculum or beyond.
  • Model curiosity by adding your own wonderings. Example: “I wonder how astronauts sleep in space?”

3. Gather Student Questions

  • Give students time each week to write and post their questions.
  • Encourage different types of questions:
    • 🔍 Factual: “Why do leaves change color in the fall?”
    • 🤔 Conceptual: “What would happen if the sun never set?”
    • 🎨 Creative: “If you could invent a new planet, what would it look like?”

4. Keep the Wonder Alive

  • Select a few questions each week to explore as a class.
  • Pair students to research and share findings.
  • Tie questions to classroom lessons.

5. Showcase Learning

  • Dedicate time for students to present their discoveries.
  • Use Wonder Wall discussions as writing prompts, STEM challenges, or inquiry projects.
  • Create a “Wonder of the Month” display, celebrating standout questions and research.
Image of a wonder wall.
Image by Author from Canva Templates by Teach Cheat

Tech Tools to Enhance Your Wonder Wall

  • Canva: Canva is a collaborative space where students can post questions, images, and links. In addition, there you can search for Wonder Wall templates.
  • Padlet: Like Canva, Padlet is a collaborative board where students can post questions.
  • ChatGPT: ChatGPT can help students research their questions with AI-generated answers and resources.
  • Magic School AI: Magic School AI can generate discussion prompts or scaffold research for student inquiries.
  • Google Slides: Google Slides is a simple way to organize and categorize wall questions.

Bringing the Wonder Wall to Life Across Subjects

  • Science: Ask students to post “I wonder…” questions before starting an experiment.
  • ELA: Use the wall questions as writing prompts or discussion starters.
  • Social Studies: Encourage students to ask historical “What if?” questions.
  • Math: Explore real-world math applications through student inquiries.

Let Wonder Drive Learning

A Wonder Wall transforms a classroom into a space where curiosity is celebrated, questions lead to discovery, and students feel empowered to learn. By making inquiry a part of your teaching, you’ll nurture lifelong learners who approach the world with curiosity and critical thinking.

Ready to start your own? Share your ideas in the comments below!

You may also like

Leave a Comment

You've Made It This Far

Like what you're reading? Sign up to stay connected with us.

 

 

*By downloading, you are subscribing to our email list which includes our daily blog straight to your inbox and marketing emails. It can take up to 7 days for you to be added. You can change your preferences at any time. 

You have Successfully Subscribed!