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Parent Roles and Responsibilities in Education Survey

Maps how parents and caregivers actually divide day-to-day responsibilities for a child's education — homework help, school communication, events, and decisions — and where the load feels unbalanced. Built for schools, family researchers, and co-parenting programs, with an AI follow-up that digs into the most recent moment the division felt unfair or broke down.

Sample questions

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

14 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Thanks for taking part! This survey looks at how responsibilities for your child's education are shared in your household — things like homework, school communication, and decisions. It takes about 5-6 minutes and there are no right or wrong answers.

Q02
Multiple ChoiceRequired

Who is the primary point of contact between your household and your child's school right now?

  • You
  • Co-parent/partner
  • Shared equally
  • Another caregiver (e.g., grandparent)
  • Other
Q03
Point AllocationRequired

Thinking about all the day-to-day work of your child's education (homework, communication, events, decisions), how is that work actually split? Distribute 100 points across who does it.

  • Yourself
  • Co-parent/partner
  • Other family member (e.g., grandparent, sibling)
  • Outside support (tutor, aftercare, school staff)
Allocate 100 points
Q04
MatrixRequired

How often are you personally involved in each of the following?

6 rows × 5 columns
  • Helping with homework
  • Attending school events or conferences
  • Communicating with teachers
  • Monitoring grades and progress
  • Coordinating extracurricular activities
  • +1 more
Columns: Never · Rarely · Sometimes · Often · Always
Q05
Opinion ScaleRequired

Overall, how satisfied are you with how education-related responsibilities are divided in your household?

Scale: 17
Min:Not at all satisfiedMax:Extremely satisfied
Q06
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last 30 days, how many times have you personally communicated directly with your child's teacher(s)?

  • Not at all
  • Once
  • 2-3 times
  • 4 or more times
Q07
RankingRequired

Rank these responsibilities from the one that causes you the most stress or burden to the least.

  1. Helping with homework
  2. Communicating with the school
  3. Attending events and conferences
  4. Monitoring academic performance
  5. Coordinating extracurricular activities
  6. Making financial or enrollment decisions
Drag to rank
Q08
AI Interview

Anchor on the respondent's point allocation and satisfaction rating. Ask them to describe the most recent specific moment when the division of education-related responsibilities felt unfair, unclear, or broke down — what happened, who was involved, and how it got resolved (or didn't). If they reported high satisfaction, probe what specifically makes the current arrangement work so well, and whether that has always been true or changed over time.

Q09
Multiple Choice

Compared to a year ago, has your share of your child's education-related responsibilities changed?

  • Increased a lot
  • Increased somewhat
  • Stayed about the same
  • Decreased somewhat
  • Decreased a lot
Q10
Long Text

What is one thing that would make managing your child's education-related responsibilities easier for you right now?

Q11
Multiple Choice

Which best describes your relationship to the child/children in question?

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

Which best describes your household structure?

  • Two parents/guardians living together
  • Single-parent household
  • Co-parenting across two households
  • Blended or step-family household
  • Other
  • Prefer not to say
Q13
Dropdown

How many school-age children do you have?

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4 or more
  • Prefer not to say
Q14
Message

That's everything — thank you for your honesty! Your responses will be combined with other families' answers to help schools and family programs better support how households share the work of raising and educating kids.

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 anchors on the respondent's own point allocation and satisfaction rating, then digs into the most recent moment the division of responsibilities felt unfair or broke down
  • Combines a constant-sum allocation question and a matrix of involvement frequency with a stress-ranking exercise, giving both quantitative division-of-labor data and qualitative context in one flow
  • Captures household structure, relationship to the child, and number of school-age children so responses can be segmented by family configuration
  • Asks about year-over-year change and a single most-wanted improvement, giving researchers and schools a clear, actionable close alongside the automated report

Jotform

Parent Roles and Responsibilities Survey Form Template

A fielding-ready static form template covering parent roles in a child's education, built on Jotform's drag-and-drop form builder. It's easy to customize and embed but relies on fixed question sets with no adaptive questioning. Good for quick data collection, less suited to uncovering the 'why' behind imbalance.

What it does well

  • Ready-to-use, easily customizable form builder
  • Simple embedding and distribution via Jotform's ecosystem
  • Familiar drag-and-drop editing for non-technical users

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI follow-up to probe individual answers further
  • No per-response quality scoring
  • No published methodology or prompt transparency for how questions were designed

SurveyMonkey

Parent Roles And Responsibilities Survey Template

A standard fielding-ready template from a major survey platform, likely offering solid question logic and benchmarking within SurveyMonkey's ecosystem. It covers the same general topic but as a static questionnaire without conversational depth. Best for broad quantitative snapshots rather than uncovering specific breakdown moments.

What it does well

  • Backed by a well-known survey platform with strong distribution and analytics tools
  • Likely includes skip logic and benchmarking data
  • Quick to deploy for large-scale quantitative data collection

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI interview to follow up on specific unfair or breakdown moments
  • No voice AI interview option
  • No automated per-response quality scoring or transparent prompt methodology

SurveySparrow

Parental Involvement Survey Questionnaire For Students

A conversational-style static survey template focused on parental involvement, framed from a student/school involvement angle rather than division-of-labor between co-parents or caregivers. It offers a chat-like UI but not true adaptive AI follow-up questioning. Useful for general involvement tracking, less tailored to the fairness/burden-sharing angle QuestionPunk targets.

What it does well

  • Conversational chat-style UI that feels more engaging than a plain form
  • Focused on parental involvement in schooling
  • Easy to deploy within SurveySparrow's platform

Where it falls short

  • No adaptive AI follow-up interview to explore specific breakdown moments in responsibility-sharing
  • Not focused on inter-parent/caregiver division of labor or fairness, unlike QuestionPunk's template
  • No automated quality scoring or transparent prompt-level methodology

Ready to launch?

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