BEYOND ACTIVITIES: DESIGNING LEARNING ENGAGEMENTS THAT BUILD
THINKING
Moving from busy classrooms to thoughtful learning experiences that nurture curiosity,
reasoning, and deep understanding.
“Children must be taught how to think, not what to think.”
- Margaret Mead
Walk into any classroom today, and you will likely see students busy doing something:
cutting, colouring, solving worksheets, building models, or participating in group tasks. At
first glance, such classrooms appear vibrant and engaging. Students are active, teachers
are facilitating, and the room hums with energy.
But an important question often goes unasked: Are students truly thinking, or are they
simply doing?
In many classrooms, activity has become synonymous with learning. Yet meaningful
learning requires something deeper than movement or participation. It requires engagement
with ideas, reflection on experiences, and opportunities to make sense of new information.
In other words, what students need are not just activities, but learning engagements that
stimulate thinking.
When Activity Does Not Equal Learning
An activity becomes meaningful when it opens the door to thinking. A worksheet, craft
project, or group task may keep students engaged, but learning begins to deepen when
students start asking questions, noticing patterns, and reflecting on their experiences.
Take a simple example from a math classroom. Students may be asked to measure objects
around the room using a ruler and record their findings. The task is hands-on and lively, and
students move around enthusiastically measuring desks, books, and pencil boxes. Yet if the
experience ends with recording numbers, the learning may remain procedural rather than
conceptual.
Now imagine extending the same task with questions that invite deeper thinking.
A teacher might begin by asking, “What do you notice about the measurements
different groups recorded?” This simple question encourages students to look carefully
at the data and identify patterns. Because there may be multiple possible observations, it
invites curiosity and analytical thinking.
The teacher might then ask, “Why do you think some groups measured the same
object differently?” Questions like this prompt students to justify their thinking and explain
their reasoning, making their understanding visible to both the teacher and their peers.
Another question might follow: “What might happen if we started measuring from the
middle of the ruler instead of zero?” Such questions encourage students to form
hypotheses, test ideas, and experiment with different possibilities.
With these questions, the task begins to change. Students start discussing, predicting, and
reconsidering their ideas. The same activity now becomes a learning engagement
because it invites reasoning and exploration. Often, the difference lies not in the task itself,
but in how the experience is framed.
In such moments, the classroom conversation often becomes as valuable as the task itself.
“Why is my measurement different from yours?” one student might ask.
“Maybe you started from the wrong line,” another responds.
A third student looks closely at the ruler and says,
“Oh… we were not starting from zero.”
At that moment, the learning shifts. Students are no longer simply measuring objects; they
are examining their thinking and refining their understanding.
What Psychology Tells Us About Learning
Educational psychology helps explain why such experiences matter. Piaget’s work suggests
that children construct knowledge by acting on their environment and reorganising their
thinking when their observations challenge their existing ideas. Similarly, Lev Vygotsky
highlighted the importance of social interaction in learning. Through conversations with
peers and guidance from teachers, students move beyond what they can do independently
toward deeper levels of understanding.
Research in cognitive science further suggests that learning is strengthened when students
are encouraged to explain their thinking, reflect on their experiences, and connect ideas.
These processes help the brain organise information meaningfully rather than storing it as
isolated facts. This is why experiences that focus only on completing tasks sometimes fail
to produce lasting learning. Without opportunities to question or reflect, students may
complete an activity successfully without truly understanding the ideas behind it.
Designing Learning Engagements
Transforming an activity into a meaningful learning engagement does not require elaborate
resources. Often, it is the intentional design of the experience that makes the difference. A
powerful learning engagement usually includes three key elements.
- A Meaningful Experience
Students need opportunities to interact with ideas or materials in ways that spark curiosity.
A simple hands-on task can become powerful when it connects to a larger concept.
For example, instead of simply asking students to build a bridge using craft sticks, the
challenge might be to design a bridge that can support a certain amount of weight and
explain why their structure works.
- Thinking Through Questions
Questions play a central role in deepening learning. Thoughtful questions encourage
students to analyse, compare, predict, and justify their thinking.
Questions such as:
- What patterns do you notice?
- Why do you think this happened?
- What might happen if we tried another approach?
These questions invite students to move beyond doing the task to thinking about the
ideas behind it.
- Reflection
Learning deepens when students pause to reflect on what they have experienced. They
may draw diagrams, explain their reasoning to a partner, write a short reflection, or share
their ideas with the class.
Reflection helps learners organise their thinking and allows teachers to see how students
are making sense of their experiences.
From Busy Classrooms to Thinking Classrooms
For educators, the challenge today is not simply to create classrooms that are active, but to
create classrooms that are thoughtful. When learning experiences are intentionally
designed to encourage questioning, reasoning, and reflection, students begin to see
learning as more than completing tasks. They begin to see it as a process of discovery.
In such environments, learning is no longer defined by how much students produce, but by
how deeply they understand. A model built, a worksheet completed, or a task finished
becomes meaningful only when it leads students to pause and ask deeper questions.
Perhaps the true measure of a learning experience is not how busy the classroom appears,
but whether students leave with a clearer sense of how ideas work and why they matter.
And sometimes, the most powerful moment in a classroom is a quiet one, when a student
looks up and says,
“Now I understand.”
References
Piaget, J. (1952). The origins of intelligence in children. International Universities Press.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes.
Harvard University Press.
Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by Design (Expanded 2nd ed.). ASCD.
Author Bio
Afreen Zaheer is an educator and instructional leader with extensive experience in inquiry-
based learning and the IB Primary Years Programme (PYP). She is passionate about
designing meaningful learning experiences that nurture curiosity, critical thinking, and deep
conceptual understanding. Through her work with teachers, she advocates for classrooms
where questioning, reflection, and student agency drive learning.