Why do we always draw stars like this ⭐️ when they’re actually spheres?”
The most wonderful questions often come from children. The ones that catch us off guard, make us smile, and also make us think. The ones that open doors to knowledge and remind us that curiosity is the first form of intelligence.
At our three H-FARM International School campuses, teachers have collected some of the most unique questions posed by our students. Questions that range from “How can a volcano sleep?” to “If leaves make glucose, when we eat plants, are we eating sugar?”, all the way to “What would happen if the Earth stopped spinning?” or “Why are pizzas round but the boxes square?”
Each question is a small universe of curiosity. A different way of looking at the world, refusing to accept reality as something fixed, and instead wanting to understand it deeply.
And this is exactly where our educational approach begins.
At H-FARM International School, we encourage our students to nurture their natural curiosity and to develop the skills necessary to investigate, research, and reflect. The inquirer approach, a core element of the IB Learner Profile, is the heartbeat of our philosophy: learning how to learn, with enthusiasm and independence, keeping the passion for discovery alive throughout life.
Our teachers don’t just provide answers, they provide the tools to find them. They guide students to think critically and creatively, to ask new questions, to collaborate, and to learn from mistakes. Because we believe that every doubt is a seed, and curiosity is the fertile ground where knowledge can grow.
Choosing H-FARM International School means entering an environment where every question is an opportunity.
Where students learn to imagine, design, and build their own future.
Where the diversity of talents is valued, human growth is supported, and collaboration is fostered within a digital and innovative ecosystem.
In other words, it means embracing the H-FARM Approach: a unique way of learning, where discovery is not limited, it is encouraged.
Because behind every “why?”, every “how?”, every “what if?”, lies the possibility of changing the world.