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Parent Self-Efficacy in Supporting Child Learning

Measures how confident parents and caregivers feel across the specific tasks of supporting a child's education — homework help, motivation, school communication, and behavior management — plus an AI follow-up that digs into the real story behind their toughest challenge. Built for schools, districts, and parenting programs assessing where families need more support.

Sample questions

A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.

12 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Thanks for taking a few minutes for this! We're trying to understand how confident parents and caregivers feel supporting their kids' learning, and where extra help would make the biggest difference. About 5 minutes, and there are no wrong answers.

Q02
MatrixRequired

How confident do you feel in each of these areas right now?

6 rows × 5 columns
  • Helping my child with homework or schoolwork
  • Communicating with my child's teachers or school
  • Motivating my child to stay engaged in learning
  • Managing behavior around schoolwork (e.g., procrastination, frustration)
  • Guiding my child's use of technology/screens for learning
  • +1 more
Columns: Not at all confident · Slightly confident · Moderately confident · Very confident · Extremely confident
Q03
Opinion ScaleRequired

Overall, how confident do you feel in your ability to support your child's education right now?

Scale: 010
Min:Not at all confidentMax:Extremely confident
Q04
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last 7 days, how many times did you help your child with homework or schoolwork?

  • Not at all
  • 1-2 times
  • 3-5 times
  • Every day
  • Not applicable - no homework assigned
Q05
Multiple ChoiceRequired

Which of these is currently the hardest part of supporting your child's learning?

  • Helping with homework I don't fully understand myself
  • Keeping my child motivated to engage in learning
  • Communicating with teachers or the school
  • Managing behavior or emotional reactions to schoolwork
  • Balancing screen time and technology use for learning
  • Finding enough time given work or other responsibilities
Q06
Rating ScaleRequired

How well-equipped do you feel with the tools, resources, or knowledge to support your child's learning?

Range: 15
Min:Not at all equippedMax:Extremely well equipped
Q07
Multiple Choice

In the last 3 months, which of these have you used for support with your child's learning?

  • Talked with other parents
  • Talked with teachers or school staff
  • Used online resources or videos
  • Read parenting books or articles
  • Worked with a tutor or learning specialist
  • Used a parenting app or program
Q08
AI Interview

Probe the respondent's answer to the 'hardest part' question in depth: ask for a specific recent example of when this challenge came up, what they tried, and what actually happened. If their overall confidence rating was low, explore what would most increase it — a specific resource, more time, or a particular skill. If they rated themselves confident overall but flagged one weak area, find out whether that gap causes real day-to-day friction or is a minor, low-stakes concern.

Q09
Multiple Choice

How many children do you currently have in school (K-12)?

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4 or more
  • Prefer not to say
Q10
Multiple Choice

What is your relationship to the child or children you were thinking of while answering?

  • Mother
  • Father
  • Grandparent
  • Legal guardian
  • Other caregiver
  • Prefer not to say
Q11
Multiple Choice

What is the highest level of education you've completed?

  • High school or less
  • Some college
  • Bachelor's degree
  • Graduate degree
  • Prefer not to say
Q12
Message

That's everything - thank you for your honesty! Your answers will help us understand where parents feel confident and where more support is needed, so we can build better resources for families.

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

  • Breaks confidence down by specific task areas (homework help, motivation, school communication, behavior management) via a matrix rather than a single global rating
  • Includes an AI follow-up interview that probes the respondent's self-identified 'hardest part' in depth, surfacing the real story behind the number instead of just a score
  • Captures context (number of school-age children, relationship to child, education level, recent support resources used) so results can be segmented by household type
  • Combines quantitative confidence ratings with qualitative depth in one flow, then auto-generates a report, without requiring a researcher to manually code open-ended answers

Jotform

Parent Self-Efficacy Survey Form Template

A ready-to-use static form template covering parent self-efficacy in supporting a child's education, built on Jotform's drag-and-drop form builder. It's easy to customize and deploy quickly, but it's a fixed question set rather than an adaptive interview. Good for basic data collection, less suited to uncovering the 'why' behind low-confidence answers.

What it does well

  • Quick to deploy and customize using Jotform's familiar form builder
  • Likely integrates with Jotform's broader form ecosystem (payments, notifications, storage)
  • Free or low-cost entry point typical of Jotform templates

Where it falls short

  • Static question set with no adaptive AI follow-up to probe individual answers
  • No voice interview option or guided screen-share tasks
  • No automated per-response quality scoring or transparent prompt methodology

SurveyMonkey

Parent Self-efficacy Survey Template

A standard survey template addressing parent self-efficacy, benefiting from SurveyMonkey's established survey infrastructure and analytics. It's a conventional fixed-form questionnaire rather than a conversational or adaptive tool. Useful for straightforward benchmarking but won't dig deeper into open-ended responses automatically.

What it does well

  • Backed by SurveyMonkey's mature survey platform and analytics dashboard
  • Easy respondent distribution across email, web, and social channels
  • Established brand familiar to many school and program administrators

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI follow-up questions to explore a respondent's toughest challenge in depth
  • No voice-based interview or screen-share task options
  • No transparent, publishable prompt methodology behind question logic

SurveySparrow

Parental Involvement Survey Questionnaire For Students

This template focuses on parental involvement generally, offered via SurveySparrow's conversational-style survey format. It shares thematic overlap with self-efficacy topics like homework help and communication, though it centers on involvement/engagement rather than confidence specifically. It's a fixed conversational form, not an AI-driven adaptive interview.

What it does well

  • Conversational, chat-like UI that can feel more approachable than static forms
  • Covers related parental engagement themes such as homework and school communication
  • Mobile-friendly presentation typical of SurveySparrow templates

Where it falls short

  • No true adaptive AI interviewing — question flow is pre-set, not generated from prior answers
  • No voice AI interview or guided task/screen-share capability
  • No automated quality scoring or transparent AI prompt disclosure

Ready to launch?

Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.