Create your survey

Create your survey

Create your survey

Best questions for kindergarten teacher survey about assessment practices

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

·

Aug 30, 2025

Create your survey

Here are some of the best questions for a Kindergarten Teacher survey about assessment practices, plus tips to create them. You can generate your own custom survey in seconds using Specific—no need to start from scratch.

Best open-ended questions for a kindergarten teacher survey about assessment practices

Open-ended questions encourage detailed feedback and true opinions. They’re perfect for uncovering what teachers really think, surfacing experiences that choice-based questions can miss.

  1. How do you currently assess students’ progress in your classroom?

  2. What methods of assessment have you found most effective for kindergarten students?

  3. Describe challenges you’ve faced with current assessment practices.

  4. Which assessment tools or resources would help you improve your approach?

  5. How do you balance formal assessments with everyday classroom observations?

  6. What role does student engagement play in your assessment process?

  7. Can you share a recent example where assessment data positively impacted a student’s learning?

  8. How do you communicate assessment results to families?

  9. In what ways should assessment practices change to better support kindergarten learners?

  10. What professional development would help you feel more confident in your assessment strategies?

Open-ended questions like these reveal not just the “what,” but also the “why” and “how.” For example, as AI-based assessment tools gain traction—currently used in 65% of schools to drive personalized learning and grading efficiency[2]—teachers’ real stories help us understand implementation challenges and benefits.

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for a kindergarten teacher survey about assessment practices

Single-select multiple-choice questions are perfect when you need clean, quantifiable data or want to jumpstart a conversation. They make it easier for kindergarten teachers to respond quickly and can direct you to the right topics for deeper exploration—especially useful when you want to build from structured choices to rich insights.

Question: What is your primary method for assessing student progress in your classroom?

  • Observational notes

  • Performance tasks (e.g., projects, presentations)

  • Standardized tests

  • Portfolios

Question: How confident do you feel using digital or AI-based assessment tools?

  • Very confident

  • Somewhat confident

  • Not confident

  • I have never used them

Question: Which factor most influences your choice of assessment methods?

  • School policy

  • Student needs

  • Available resources

  • Other

When to follow up with "why?" Use a follow-up “why?” when you want to unpack reasoning behind a choice. For example, if a teacher selects "student needs" as the biggest influence, a follow-up like “Why do student needs weigh so heavily in your approach?” leads to richer, revealing feedback.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Always add “Other” if you suspect there might be responses outside your listed options. It gives respondents room to surface experiences and perspectives you hadn’t anticipated. Following up on “Other” can uncover genuinely unexpected insights.

Should you use an NPS question in a kindergarten teacher survey about assessment practices?

NPS (Net Promoter Score) questions—“On a scale of 0–10, how likely are you to recommend XYZ?”—aren’t just for customer loyalty. They work well in education to measure overall sentiment and advocacy among teachers for specific assessment processes or tools. NPS can act as a leading indicator of buy-in and satisfaction, helping policymakers spot issues before they become bigger problems.

Given the integration of new tech like AI in assessment—60% of U.S. teachers now use AI tools and frequent users report saving up to six hours per week[1]—an NPS question surfaces quick, actionable benchmarking data. It’s easy to set up: try an NPS survey for kindergarten assessment practices.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions transform feedback collection: they take broad responses and uncover the context that matters. Platforms like Specific leverage AI-powered automatic follow-ups (see how automated followups work), providing probing questions in real time, just like a skilled interviewer.

  • Teacher: "I rely mostly on portfolios."

  • AI follow-up: "Can you share why you’ve chosen portfolios over other assessment types, and how that impacts your students?"

Without such follow-ups, you’re often left guessing—responses are “thin,” and you miss out on nuance. But when the AI follows up right away, it feels natural for the teacher to elaborate, and you extract insights that static forms would overlook. Automated follow-ups have another huge advantage: if you used email or phone for the same back-and-forth, it could take days; AI handles it instantly and at scale.

How many follow-ups to ask? Generally, 2–3 follow-ups is enough. You want depth, but you don’t want to exhaust the respondent. Specific lets you set this, and even skip to the next topic once you’ve got what you need.

This makes it a conversational survey: Instead of a survey feeling like a cold checklist, the feedback turns into an authentic dialogue—improving both detail and trust from participants.

AI survey response analysis: Even with lots of open-text answers and follow-up responses, tools like Specific’s AI-driven survey response analysis make it painless to summarize and categorize feedback by theme. No more reading dozens (or hundreds) of entries one by one.

Automated follow-up questions are a real innovation—give them a try the next time you build an AI-powered survey and experience the richer, faster insights for yourself.

How to prompt ChatGPT or other AIs to generate great kindergarten teacher survey questions about assessment practices

AI prompts can make or break the quality of your survey questions. Here’s how to get specific results:

Start simple—just ask for what you need:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for Kindergarten Teacher survey about Assessment Practices.

But, always remember, giving more context yields better results. For instance, you could add details about your school, goals, or respondent experience:

"Suggest 10 open-ended questions for a survey for kindergarten teachers who have varying levels of experience with both traditional and AI-based assessment tools. The aim is to identify what helps or hinders their effectiveness, and discover opportunities for improvement."

Next, ask AI to organize the results for clarity:

Look at the questions and categorize them. Output categories with the questions under them.

After reviewing, zero in on what matters most. For example:

Generate 10 questions for the categories "Technology Use" and "Professional Development."

This iterative approach ensures your AI-generated survey is on point—especially useful if you use the AI survey generator within Specific.

What is a conversational survey?

A conversational survey feels like a genuine dialogue, not a stiff form. Instead of bombarding educators with a bland list of questions, AI-driven conversational surveys—like those built on Specific—engage respondents with context-aware follow-ups, clarifying queries, and a friendlier tone. The feedback experience is transformed: more like a chat with a peer, less like filling out paperwork.

How does AI-generated survey creation compare to the manual route? See this quick visual comparison:

Manual

AI-Generated

Brainstorm every question, one by one

Instantly generate expert-style questions based on your prompt

Edit, reword, and test for flow

Chat-edit and update structure with natural language, using an AI survey editor

Hope your questions dig deep—rarely get nuanced responses

Leverage AI-driven follow-up questions for context-rich feedback

Manual response analysis—slow and tedious

AI-powered, real-time analysis, see trends at a glance

Why use AI for kindergarten teacher surveys? It’s not just speed: AI lets you create surveys tailored to teacher’s daily realities, surface subtle insights with rich, conversational follow-ups, and analyze feedback without drowning in data. With the rise of AI-based assessment tools (which 55% of educators report as improving grading efficiency[3]), it’s smart to mirror that same efficiency and flexibility in your own survey process.

If you want a step-by-step, here’s a guide on how to create a survey for kindergarten teachers about assessment practices and another on how to analyze the responses—both using Specific’s tools. Specific is designed for best-in-class conversational surveys, making feedback enjoyable and productive for both you and your teacher respondents.

See this assessment practices survey example now

See how you can capture richer, more nuanced feedback and save hours using an AI-driven conversational survey for assessment practices—try Specific and unlock smarter insights right away.

Create your survey

Try it out. It's fun!

Sources

  1. AP News. 60% of U.S. public school teachers used AI in 2024-25; frequent users save up to six hours weekly.

  2. Zipdo. 65% of schools incorporate AI-based assessment tools for improved grading and personalized learning.

  3. Zipdo. 55% of educators say AI has improved grading efficiency.

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.