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What is the IB Primary Years Programme?

Tes takes a look at what makes this pupil-led curriculum phase so unique
1st June 2025, 4:01pm

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What is the IB Primary Years Programme?

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The IB primary years programme explained

Introduced in 1997, the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme (PYP) is a curriculum framework for pupils aged 3 to 12, and is designed to prepare them for the IB Middle Years Programme and Diploma Programme.

It is now taught in more than 2,275 schools across more than 127 countries.

All IB programmes centre on the “learner profile”, which outlines that IB pupils should aim to be inquirers, thinkers and communicators, who are principled, open-minded, caring, balanced and reflective.

Throughout the PYP, pupils are asked to identify how they embody those traits.

As with the other IB programmes, the PYP curriculum is designed to focus on concept-based learning over content-based learning. It also looks to encourage an international perspective and ensure that communication, independence and research are important parts of pupils’ learning.

The idea behind the PYP is that, rather than just memorising a set of facts, pupils engage in their own learning in a natural way, questioning, exploring and experimenting to develop their ability to learn.

IB Primary Years Programme

Subjects and themes

The PYP covers six subject areas: language, social studies, mathematics, arts, science, and personal, social and physical education.

These subject areas are explored through six themes: who we are, where we are in place and time, how we express ourselves, how the world works, how we organise ourselves, and sharing the planet. Each school develops a programme of inquiry based on these six transdisciplinary themes.


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The PYP’s approach to learning is designed to apply teaching to a real-world context, where there aren’t distinct subject boundaries. Instead it investigates common themes across subjects, with the aim of developing in pupils a decompartmentalised understanding of learning.

In the classroom

A typical lesson plan might start with an open-ended question, developed by either the teacher or the pupils, such as “Does being rich make you happy?”.

From there, the teacher will encourage pupils to discuss the question and search for their own answers.

The final year of the programme culminates in the PYP exhibition, a rite of passage to the Middle Years Programme, for which pupils are asked to carry out an extended, in-depth collaborative project.

Exhibitions often take the form of a display board, giving pupils the chance to present their findings to others and to share their learning process.

Find out more about the IB Primary Years Programme .

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