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Parents and children exploring a park together, fostering curiosity through outdoor play

Fostering Curiosity in Kids: 10 Effective Strategies

Originally published October 31, 2024 · Updated April 16, 2026

One of the lessons I teach in my books is “you can’t just a dog by its bark.” In other words, it’s important to get to know people before forming opinions about them. How can we teach this to our kids? One great way is to focus on curiosity and how it fosters deeper understanding and stronger relationships.

In my third book ROWLF!, the main feline character, Fassa, has been plagued by a loud barking dog for months. He fears this dog and continuously lets its bark ruin his day. Eventually, he seeks out the dog and finds one of the sweetest animals he’ve ever met. What did Fassa do here? I find the most important thing he did was to be CURIOUS. Instead of just believing the dog was one way, Fassa ventured out, got to know the dog, and developed an informed opinion that led to a new friendship.

So let’s look more into curiosity and how we can teach it to our kids. The cool thing about curiosity is that it can be intellectual as well as stir our hearts and spirits.

Taking time to learn about and understand others is a skill that goes far beyond playground friendships. When we take the time to get to know others beyond a first impression, we:

  • Test our assumptions – we often jump to conclusions rather quickly about others. We can validate what we initially thought was true by engaging and interacting.
  • Challenge our “mind reader” abilities and develop critical thinking skills – we often read into what others think about us and can drive ourselves a little crazy. If we take the time to ask people what they think rather than guessing, it can be a pleasant surprise.
  • Realize different tastes can be delightful – when someone’s preferences are completely different than ours, it actually is a compliment to how unique we all are…and you may learn to like something new.
  • Learn to admit when we’re wrong – this is a big one. Was your first impression wrong? Being able to admit it is huge and leads to humility and yet another chance to learn.

By instilling this mindset early on in our kids, we’re not just preventing hurt feelings; we’re teaching our children lifelong social, emotional, and critical thinking skills.

10 Ways to Foster Curiosity in Our Children

  1. Be intentional about being curious – make a concerted effort to ask questions about and look deeper into your daily tasks, especially in front of your kids. Which leads us to…
  2. Model curiosity for your kids – our kids mimic us. When you are doing various activities with your kids, wonder out loud about what you’re doing/seeing together – why do cars need gas, why do the leaves change, where do libraries get their books?
  3. Pursue your interests and encourage your children to also – you may love gardening so have a variety of books on flowers. Does your child like cars? Find ways to nurture this curiosity through books, activities, toys, etc.
  4. Engage in role-play – ask your child to imagine how others feel and react in different situations, like being the new kid on the soccer team.
  5. Provide choices and challenges – give your children an opportunity to take risks and express preferences by providing various ways they could complete a task and letting them decide what to do.
  6. Read together – books are such a great way to open the world to our kids. And you can help them pursue their interests even more through this great tool. If your child likes bugs, read about bugs!
  7. Ask open-ended questions – we’ve all dealt with the “yes” and “no” one-word answers from our children, so ask questions such as “How did you feel about….?” These questions encourage them to critically think about their answers and develop the muscles of curiosity and imagination.
  8. Make time for imaginative, free play – get out the boxes, blankets, and household items that don’t have instructions, and let your kids be curious and make up their own games.
  9. Celebrate curiosity with encouragement – make sure to recognize and appreciate your kids for asking questions, trying new things, and attempting to solve problems.
  10. Make it ok to be uncomfortable – when your child is unsure of something like Fassa was about the dog, it can be really uncomfortable. But this is the time to grow. Instead of trying to push away discomfort, fear, or anxiety, we can help our kids get curious and transform these feelings into something useful.

Curiosity has so many benefits, including the desire to get to know others beyond a first impression. As the saying goes, you can’t judge a book by its cover – let’s teach our kids to “open the books” to see the wonderful things that may be waiting inside for them!

The third book in my children’s activity book series, ROWLF!, has a story, plot twists, and activities to teach this wonderful lesson. And for more information about and benefits of curiosity, please see below.

How the Fassa Tails Book Series Fosters Curiosity

The Fassa Tails series fosters curiosity by transforming reading into an active exploration of the child’s physical, scientific, and emotional world. The books achieve this by blending exploratory narratives with hands-on experiments, observational tracking, and sensory play.

Encouraging Direct Observation

The workbooks train children to be curious about the subtle details in their daily environments. In Book 3, the “Law of Change” activity prompts children to quietly observe and track how a room or natural setting changes throughout the day. Similarly, Book 6 turns children into curious observers of human behavior; the “Funny Faces” activity asks them to carefully study and practice identifying the physical nuances of different facial expressions.

Promoting Scientific Inquiry and STEM

The books naturally transition storytelling into scientific investigation, tapping into a child’s natural wonder about how the world works. Book 5 centers on Cassie the Border Collie, an “extra-ordinary scientist,” which inspires kids to test their own hypotheses through hands-on engineering crafts like building a “Homemade Helicopter” and testing “The Physics of Frisbee” with weights. Book 6 fosters curiosity about meteorology and light by having kids perform the “Sunset Maker” experiment, using milk, water, and a flashlight to discover the science behind why the sky changes color.

Inspiring Outdoor and Sensory Exploration

The series actively pushes kids off screens and encourages them to physically explore their surroundings. Book 4 is specifically designed to encourage outdoor exploration and unstructured play, providing a craft where children build a DIY paper-tube telescope for the “Scope and Seek” visual-tracking game. Book 1 taps into physical curiosity through the “5 Senses Scavenger Hunt,” a real-world activity where children use all of their senses to investigate their environment, mirroring how Fassa explores the sights, sounds, and smells of his new home.

Modeling How to Investigate the Unknown

Throughout the narratives, the characters consistently model curiosity as a brave tool to overcome fear and prejudice. When Fassa is terrified by a booming bark in Book 3, he models how to safely investigate the source of a scary noise to discover the truth, rather than simply hiding from it. He takes a similar exploratory approach in Book 4 when he bravely investigates his nightmares to discover his new friend Angel, and in Book 7 when he braves a dark thunderstorm to investigate the source of mysterious, tiny squeaks.