WEBINAR SERIES
Exploring Inquiry Journeys
Discover how schools are bringing inquiry-based social studies to life.
REGISTER NOW

Real Classrooms. Real Conversations. Real Curriculum in Action.
Looking to deepen your understanding of what high-quality, inquiry-based social studies looks like in practice? Join inquirED this fall for Exploring Inquiry Journeys, a webinar series designed to support school and district leaders. Each session offers practical insights into our K–5 social studies curriculum and the strategies schools are using to engage students, support teachers, and build consistency across classrooms.
PRODUCT DEMO WEBINAR
Discover Inquiry Journeys: A Demo of Inquiry-Based Social Studies in Action
Can inquiry-based social studies build deep knowledge and inquiry skills while supporting teacher success?
Join us for a 30-minute live walkthrough of Inquiry Journeys, inquirED’s K–5 curriculum. You'll explore how our structured inquiry model helps students build content knowledge, deepen their critical thinking, and engage in meaningful and joyful learning. Perfect for small districts, individual schools, or leaders exploring future adoption.
- Tuesday, September 16, 11 am
- Wednesday, October 29, 1 pm CT
- Tuesday, December 9, 11 am CT
INQUIRY JOURNEYS IN PRACTICE WEBINAR
Making the Most of a Pilot: Lessons from the Field
October 7, 12 pm CT
Piloting a new curriculum isn’t just a checkbox: it’s a chance to listen, learn, and lead. In this session, hear from one district leader who walked through every phase of a pilot: gathering teacher input, aligning to standards, and building trust along the way.
INQUIRY JOURNEYS IN PRACTICE WEBINAR
Supporting Teachers in the Shift to Inquiry
Tuesday, November 18, 2 pm CT
Moving to inquiry-based learning is a big instructional shift. In this session, Lindsay Hall, Department Administrator for K–5 Science, Social Science & STEM at West Aurora School District 129, will share how her team built support systems, professional learning, and peer networks to make the transition stick—and how Inquiry Journeys helped make the shift more manageable for teachers and more meaningful for students.
Save my spot →