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Parent Engagement and School Communication Survey

Measures how informed and involved parents feel in their child's education, what channels and activities actually reach them, and what stands in the way of deeper involvement. Built for school administrators and PTA/family-engagement leads, with an AI follow-up that reconstructs a specific recent interaction to surface the real reason engagement stalls.

Sample questions

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

13 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Thanks for taking a few minutes for this! We want to understand how connected you feel to your child's school and where we can make it easier for you to stay involved. This will take about 5 minutes, and honest answers help us the most.

Q02
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last month, how often did you check communications from your child's school (emails, app, newsletters, texts)?

  • Almost every day
  • A few times a week
  • About once a week
  • A few times this month
  • Never
Q03
Opinion ScaleRequired

How informed do you feel about your child's day-to-day progress at school right now?

Scale: 17
Min:Not informed at allMax:Extremely informed
Q04
MatrixRequired

How much do you agree with each of the following?

5 rows × 5 columns
  • I know how to support my child's learning at home
  • I feel welcome when I visit the school
  • Teachers respond promptly when I reach out
  • I understand my child's current academic goals
  • The school makes it easy for me to stay informed
Columns: Strongly disagree · Disagree · Neutral · Agree · Strongly agree
Q05
Multiple Choice

Which of these have you done in the last 3 months?

  • Attended a parent-teacher conference
  • Volunteered at a school event or in the classroom
  • Attended a school performance, game, or open house
  • Checked or used the school's parent portal/app
  • Reached out to a teacher with a question or concern
Q06
Best–Worst Trade-off (MaxDiff)Required

From the list below, which is the biggest barrier to you getting more involved at school, and which is the least of a barrier?

  • Work schedule conflicts with school hours
  • Lack of transportation
  • Language barriers
  • Not knowing what opportunities are available
  • Feeling unwelcome or unsure how to get involved
  • Multiple children with conflicting schedules
  • Lack of childcare for other children
  • Communication is hard to understand or too frequent
Pick best & worst per setBest:Biggest barrier for meWorst:Least of a barrier for me
Q07
AI Interview

Probe the 'why' behind the barrier the respondent ranked as biggest: ask them to walk through a specific recent moment when that barrier got in the way of engaging with the school, what they wanted to do, and what actually happened. If they said nothing gets in the way, have them describe their most recent positive interaction with the school in detail and what made it work.

Q08
Rating ScaleRequired

How satisfied are you with how your child's teacher communicates with you?

Range: 15
Min:Very dissatisfiedMax:Very satisfied
Q09
Opinion ScaleRequired

How likely are you to recommend this school to other parents based on your experience so far?

Scale: 010
Min:Not at all likelyMax:Extremely likely
Q10
Multiple Choice

Which way of hearing from the school works best for you?

  • Email
  • School app or portal
  • Text message
  • Phone call
  • Printed newsletter sent home
  • Social media
  • In-person conversations
Q11
Multiple Choice

What is your relationship to the student?

  • Mother
  • Father
  • Guardian
  • Grandparent
  • Other caregiver
  • Prefer not to say
Q12
Multiple Choice

What grade level is your child currently in?

  • Pre-K/Kindergarten
  • Elementary (grades 1-5)
  • Middle school (grades 6-8)
  • High school (grades 9-12)
  • Prefer not to say
Q13
Message

That's everything — thank you for sharing your experience! Your answers will feed directly into how we plan family communication and events, so more parents feel informed and welcome.

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

  • Opens with a friendly chat-style intro and closes with a clear wrap-up message, so parents know what to expect and how their input will be used
  • Combines standard measurement (frequency of checking communications, an informed-ness scale, a satisfaction rating, a likelihood-to-recommend question, and a channel-preference and activity-participation matrix/multiple-choice set) with a MaxDiff question that forces parents to rank barriers rather than just agree with all of them
  • Includes an AI follow-up interview that specifically probes the 'why' behind whichever barrier a parent ranked as biggest, reconstructing a concrete recent interaction instead of settling for a generic complaint
  • Captures respondent context (relationship to student, child's grade level) so administrators can segment results, then auto-generates a report from the combined quantitative and interview data

Jotform

Parent Engagement Survey Form Template

A ready-to-use, customizable form built on Jotform's drag-and-drop form builder, aimed at collecting basic parent engagement feedback. It's a static question set intended for quick deployment rather than a research instrument designed to isolate root causes of disengagement.

What it does well

  • Easy to customize and embed via Jotform's widely used form builder
  • Fielding-ready template that can be deployed quickly
  • Supports typical form logic and integrations Jotform is known for

Where it falls short

  • Static question list with no adaptive follow-up to probe individual answers
  • No mechanism to reconstruct a specific recent parent-school interaction
  • No published methodology for question design or scoring

SurveyMonkey

Parent Engagement Survey Template

A standard SurveyMonkey template offering pre-written questions on parent engagement, backed by their established survey logic and analytics dashboard. Like most SurveyMonkey templates, it's a fixed questionnaire meant to be lightly edited, not one that adapts based on a respondent's own answers.

What it does well

  • Backed by SurveyMonkey's mature survey infrastructure and reporting dashboard
  • Simple to edit and distribute through familiar channels
  • Benchmarking and analytics tools SurveyMonkey is known for

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI interviewing to dig into why a specific barrier matters most to a respondent
  • Fixed question flow with no per-response follow-up probing
  • No transparent, publishable prompt/methodology layer

QuestionPro

School Survey Questions for Parents + Sample Questionnaire Template

This page reads more like a guide/article listing sample school survey questions for parents, plus a downloadable template, rather than a single fielding-ready survey instrument. It's useful for question ideas but requires assembly before it can be launched as-is.

What it does well

  • Broad library of sample question wording covering multiple parent-engagement topics
  • Educational framing that helps admins think through what to ask
  • Backed by QuestionPro's broader survey platform for building out a final form

Where it falls short

  • Presented as a question bank/guide rather than a ready-to-field survey with a fixed flow
  • No adaptive follow-up questioning based on a parent's specific answer
  • No built-in mechanism to surface the concrete 'why' behind a stated barrier

SurveySparrow

Parental Involvement Survey Questionnaire For Students

A conversational-style template from SurveySparrow, whose product is known for chat-like survey delivery, applied here to parental involvement topics. The conversational UI improves completion experience but the underlying question set is still fixed rather than adaptively branching based on individual responses.

What it does well

  • Chat-style, conversational delivery that can feel more approachable to respondents
  • Mobile-friendly presentation typical of SurveySparrow templates
  • Pre-built template covering core parental involvement themes

Where it falls short

  • Conversational UI is not the same as adaptive AI probing; question order and content are still fixed
  • No mechanism to reconstruct a specific recent interaction or ask a targeted 'why' follow-up
  • No 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.