inquiry skills
An Everyday Activity to Build Your Child's Inquiry Skills
One Everyday Therapy activity for inquiry skills is a "Wonder Box" of a few ordinary objects you explore together using open questions like "What do you notice?" and "I wonder what would happen if…?". Lead with curiosity, pause for at least five seconds, and celebrate the question rather than the answer — ten minutes a day builds the habit of wondering and asking.
Children are born scientists — every "why?" is a tiny experiment, and your kitchen table is the laboratory.
In short
One lovely Everyday Therapy activity for inquiry skills is a "Wonder Box" — pop three or four ordinary objects (a feather, a spoon, a pinecone, a shell) into a box and explore them together, asking and inviting questions rather than giving answers. For a 3–7 year old, the goal isn't right answers — it's growing the habit of noticing, wondering and asking. Just ten curious minutes a day builds real momentum.How to play the Wonder Box
1. Pick the objects together — let your child help, so they're already invested. 2. Lead with open questions: "What do you notice?", "I wonder what would happen if…?", "Why do you think it does that?" 3. Pause and wait — give a slow count of five after each question. Silence gives your child room to think and to ask their own questions back. 4. Follow their lead — if they get stuck on the spoon for ten minutes, that's perfect. Depth beats breadth. 5. Celebrate the question, not the answer: "That's a brilliant thing to wonder about!"Swap the objects each week to keep curiosity fresh. Outdoors works just as well — puddles, leaves and snails are wonderful inquiry partners.
The science
Inquiry skills sit within learning and applying knowledge (ICF d1) — watching, listening, questioning and making sense of the world. Open-ended questions and unhurried "wait time" are shown to deepen children's reasoning and language, because they shift a child from recalling to thinking. Curiosity-led play also strengthens attention, vocabulary and early problem-solving, all woven together.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — this activity is for everyday enrichment, not assessment. To go deeper, explore our speech therapy approach for question-and-answer skills, and see how the AbilityScore® works.Trusted sources
Aligned with WHO ICF learning-and-applying-knowledge domains and AAP/HealthyChildren guidance on play-based, curiosity-led early learning.Next step — try the Wonder Box tonight, then message our team on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181 for a friendly developmental check.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch how your child responds to open questions over a few weeks — growing curiosity, more "why" and "what if" questions, and longer attention are great signs. If your child rarely asks questions, struggles to follow simple two-step explorations, or seems frustrated by everyday tasks, mention it at a developmental check.
Try this at home
After every question you ask, count slowly to five before saying anything. That quiet "wait time" is when your child does their best thinking — and often asks a question right back.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What age is the Wonder Box activity best for?
It works beautifully for children aged about 3 to 7 years. Younger children enjoy simple noticing and naming, while older children can predict, compare and explain — just match your questions to where your child is.
What if my child doesn't answer my questions?
That's completely normal. Pause and wait a slow count of five, then gently model your own wondering aloud — "I wonder if it's heavy…". The goal is to grow the habit of curiosity, not to get correct answers, so keep it playful and pressure-free.
How often should we do this?
Ten curious minutes a day is plenty. Little and often beats long sessions. Swap the objects each week so there's always something fresh to wonder about.