Sex Education Program Effectiveness & Gaps Survey
Evaluates how comprehensive, comfortable, and useful a sex education program felt to students or recent graduates — covering which topics were actually taught, how comfortable people felt asking questions, and where they turned when information was missing. An AI follow-up interview reconstructs a specific moment where the curriculum fell short, going deeper than a topic checklist.
Sample questions
A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.
Where did most of your formal sex education come from?
- A school health or biology class
- A dedicated sex ed course
- A community or religious program
- Homeschool curriculum
- I didn't receive formal sex education
For each topic, how much did your sex education actually cover it?
- Anatomy & puberty
- Consent & boundaries
- Contraception options
- STI/STD prevention & testing
- Healthy relationship & communication skills
- +2 more
How comfortable did you feel asking questions during your sex education instruction?
How well did your sex education prepare you to make informed decisions in real situations?
When your formal sex education left gaps, where did you go for answers?
- Parent or guardian
- Friends or peers
- Internet search or social media
- A doctor or nurse
- I didn't seek out other information
Which of these topics most needed more time or depth in your sex education?
- Consent & boundaries
- Contraception options
- STI/STD prevention & testing
- Healthy relationship & communication skills
- LGBTQ+ inclusive content
- Puberty & body changes
- Online safety & sexting risks
Overall, how would you rate the quality of the sex education you received?
Identify one specific moment or situation where the respondent felt their sex education left them unprepared, confused, or too embarrassed to ask a question — anchor on the lowest-rated topic from their answers if possible. Ask what actually happened, what information they wish they'd had at the time, and how they eventually figured it out. If they say their education was uniformly strong, probe whether any peers seemed to need more support and why.
Just a couple of quick background questions — these are optional and only used to spot patterns across groups.
What is your current age range?
- 13-15
- 16-18
- 19-22
- 23+
- Prefer not to say
Which best describes your gender identity?
- Woman
- Man
- Non-binary
- Prefer not to say
That's everything — thank you for your candor. Your answers feed into a report on which sex education topics deserve more classroom time and support.
What’s included
AI follow-ups
Adaptive probes on open-ended answers that pull out detail a static form would miss.
Attention checks
Built-in safeguards against rushed answers and low-quality respondents.
AI-drafted copy
Wording, ordering, and branching written by the AI — tuned to your research goal.
Auto report
Themes, quotes, and a plain-English summary write themselves once responses come in.
How it compares
We reviewed the closest templates from other survey tools. Here’s what they do well — and where this template goes further.
Why this template
- Includes an AI follow-up interview that reconstructs a specific moment where the curriculum fell short, going beyond a static topic checklist
- Uses a matrix question to map exactly which topics were actually covered, paired with a max-diff question to prioritize which topics most needed more depth
- Captures comfort asking questions and real-world preparedness separately via two opinion scale questions, plus where students turned when information was missing
- Closes with an auto-generated report and optional demographic questions (age range, gender identity) framed transparently as optional and for grouping only
QuestionPro
Sex Education Survey Questions + Sample Questionnaire TemplateThis is a direct topical match: a ready-made sex education questionnaire covering awareness and attitudes toward sex ed topics. It reads as a static question list rather than an adaptive interview, so all respondents get the same fixed set of items regardless of their answers. There's no mechanism shown for probing deeper into an individual's specific experience.
What it does well
- Directly on-topic template for sex education survey research
- Backed by a large established survey platform with broad question-type library
- Likely quick to deploy for basic awareness/attitude benchmarking
Where it falls short
- No adaptive AI follow-up to dig into a specific respondent's experience or gap in their education
- No voice AI interview or guided screen-share task option
- No visible automated per-response quality scoring or transparent prompt methodology
Ready to launch?
Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.