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Best questions for teacher survey about homework policies

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Adam Sabla

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Aug 19, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a teacher survey about homework policies, plus smart tips on how to create them. You can use Specific to quickly build your own interactive survey in seconds—no expertise needed.

Best open-ended questions for teacher survey about homework policies

Open-ended questions let teachers share honest, nuanced insights in their own words. They reveal what multiple-choice questions can miss—real concerns, reasons, and concrete stories. Use these when you want depth and aren’t sure what patterns you’ll find. And as recent studies show, many teachers have complex views: for example, 70% of teachers believe homework has little to no impact on student achievement, and 30% feel it contributes more to stress than to learning [4]. That’s exactly the sort of context open-ended questions help uncover.

  1. What’s your overall opinion of our current homework policy?

  2. How do you decide how much homework to assign each week?

  3. Can you share an example when our homework policy worked well (or didn’t)?

  4. What challenges do you face in implementing the current homework guidelines?

  5. How does homework affect your students’ learning, motivation, or stress levels?

  6. What types of homework assignments do you find are most effective for your students?

  7. Have you had feedback from parents or students that changed your views about homework?

  8. In your view, what changes (if any) would improve homework policies for your subject?

  9. What support or resources would help you better manage homework assignments?

  10. Is there anything important about homework we haven’t yet discussed?

Thoughtful open-enders make it possible to surface issues and priorities you might never think to ask about directly.

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for teacher survey about homework policies

Single-select multiple-choice questions shine when you want to measure, compare, or quantify. Sometimes it’s easier for a respondent to quickly pick an option—especially early in a survey. It lets you spot trends, then follow up for detail.

Here are three strong examples:

Question: How effective do you feel our current homework policy is for supporting student learning?

  • Very effective

  • Somewhat effective

  • Not effective

  • Unsure

Question: How often do you receive feedback from parents specifically about homework assignments?

  • Frequently

  • Occasionally

  • Rarely

  • Never

Question: What is your greatest concern related to homework policies?

  • Student workload

  • Inequity / access

  • Relevance / curriculum fit

  • Other


When to follow up with "why?" Any time you want context or to understand motivation, follow an answer with “Why do you feel that way?” For example, if a teacher answers “Not effective” for homework policy effectiveness, asking why reveals actionable specifics. This blending of quant and qual is the backbone of insightful research.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Adding "Other" lets teachers bring up issues or perspectives you hadn’t anticipated—and the follow-up (“Please specify”) can uncover valuable insights that could otherwise go unreported.

NPS-style question for teacher survey about homework policies

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a simple, proven way to measure overall sentiment. For a teacher survey about homework policies, an NPS question can quickly tell you if your team would advocate for, stay neutral about, or oppose the current policy. This metric is easy to benchmark and track over time.

The classic wording: On a scale from 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend our school’s homework policy to a fellow educator? Follow up with “Why did you rate it this way?” to get underlying reasons. You can make an NPS survey for teachers about homework policies with one click in Specific.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions are at the heart of conversational surveys. They turn basic responses into nuanced, actionable feedback—especially important in teacher surveys, where perspectives can be layered and context matters.

Specific uses AI to listen carefully and ask targeted follow-ups based on what’s just been said. It feels like chatting with an expert, not filling in a form. This approach saves an incredible amount of time—you don’t need to chase down clarification via email because the survey does it for you, instantly and conversationally.

  • Teacher: “Homework is sometimes a waste.”

  • AI follow-up: “Can you share a recent example where you felt a homework assignment wasn’t valuable for students?”

How many followups to ask? In practice, two or three follow-up questions per response are usually enough to get the context you need. Specific lets you configure this—plus, you can set follow-ups to end as soon as the needed insight is gathered.

This makes it a conversational survey: Each question flows naturally from the previous answer, creating a genuine back-and-forth exchange that puts respondents at ease.

AI analysis, insight summaries, response themes: Even with dozens of rich, open-ended replies, it’s easy to analyze survey results with AI. Specific automatically distills key topics and reasons—no spreadsheet wrangling required.

Automatic follow-up questions are a breakthrough—if you haven’t yet, try to generate your own teacher survey experience and see how smart the dialog feels.

How to compose prompts for AI to generate teacher survey questions about homework policies

Want to draft your own sets of questions with ChatGPT or another AI? Start simple, then get more specific to improve quality:

Ask for open-ended questions first:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for teacher survey about homework policies.

Better results come with more context. Add your goals, audience, and what you hope to learn:

We are surveying K-12 teachers to understand their experiences, challenges, and opinions about current homework policies, with the aim of informing potential improvements. Please suggest 10 open-ended questions.

Organize for clarity by asking:

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

Once you see useful categories (e.g., “Communication with parents”, “Student workload”), drill further:

Generate 10 questions for the category “student workload”.

Iterate until you’re happy with what you have, or just use an AI survey generator to skip straight to a strong draft.

What is a conversational survey? Manual vs. AI survey generation

A conversational survey is a dynamic interview—one where the respondent feels like they’re chatting with an intelligent, attentive interviewer. Questions adjust as the “conversation” progresses, delving deeper through timely follow-ups (instead of rigid forms).

Traditional survey tools are static: you write every question, guess at every possibility, then hope you’ve covered enough. In contrast, an AI survey maker adapts in real time, powered by context-aware language models. The difference is huge in both the respondent’s experience and insight quality.

Manual survey creation

AI-generated conversational survey

You manually build each question, logic, and follow-up

AI instantly drafts, organizes, and improves questions using best practices

No automatic probing—easy to miss context

Automatic, context-aware follow-ups provide full stories

Static and impersonal forms

Natural chat: higher engagement and richer responses

Analysis and theme spotting is a separate, manual step

AI summarizes and identifies key themes immediately

Why use AI for teacher surveys? Beyond speed, AI brings structured creativity. It draws on huge data sets and research-backed methods to generate the strongest survey questions—saving you time, but also ensuring nothing important is missed. For example, AI-powered survey tools like Specific tap insights from real educator experience and can recommend smart probes based on recent research, such as findings that nearly half of teachers see “no effect” on social and emotional health from homework [3].

Check out our detailed guide on how to create a teacher survey about homework policies if you want hands-on instructions or more ideas.

Specific leads the way in conversational survey design—making the process easy, collaborative, and (most importantly) enjoyable for teachers being surveyed.

See this homework policies survey example now

Ready to gather powerful insights and make homework policies improve for everyone? See the difference an AI-powered, conversational survey can make—get answers that spark action, not confusion.

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Sources

  1. The 74 Million. Survey: 60% of Teachers Used AI This Year — and Saved Up to 6 Hours of Work a Week

  2. Axios. AI tutors in education: Wharton research on student performance with AI

  3. Child & Youth Care Forum. Study on homework’s effect on children’s social and emotional health

  4. ZipDo. Teacher perspectives on homework effectiveness and impact

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.