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Best questions for high school freshman student survey about advisory or homeroom usefulness

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Adam Sabla

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Aug 29, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a high school freshman student survey about advisory or homeroom usefulness, plus tips to create them effectively. With Specific, you can instantly build conversational surveys tailored to this topic without hassle.

Best open-ended questions for advisory or homeroom usefulness surveys

Open-ended questions are powerful when you want detailed, authentic feedback from high school freshmen. They let students express experiences in their own words, helping you uncover insights no multiple-choice question can provide - especially for topics like advisory or homeroom, where stories and feelings matter. They shine when you need context or when you suspect there may be issues nobody has framed yet.

  1. What aspects of advisory/homeroom time have been most helpful to you so far this year?

  2. Can you share a time when advisory or homeroom made your day easier or better?

  3. What do you wish was different about your advisory or homeroom experience?

  4. If you could change one thing about advisory/homeroom, what would it be and why?

  5. How does your advisor or homeroom teacher make you feel supported (or not supported)?

  6. What would make you look forward to advisory or homeroom more?

  7. Have you made any valuable connections thanks to advisory or homeroom? Tell us about one.

  8. In what ways could advisory or homeroom be more relevant or useful to your life?

  9. Describe a typical advisory or homeroom session. What stands out most?

  10. What advice would you give to next year’s freshmen about how to get the most out of advisory/homeroom?

The flexibility of open-ended questions can reveal new angles you haven’t considered. The popularity of conversational surveys is growing: 86% of students report using AI tools in their studies, with 24% doing so daily [1]. Creating space for nuanced, multi-layered feedback ties directly to what makes AI-powered feedback collection so valuable.

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for advisory or homeroom usefulness surveys

Single-select multiple-choice questions work well when you want to quantify experiences or benchmark overall sentiment before digging deeper. They’re especially useful early in a survey when you want to make students comfortable, and when you need a quick, aggregate sense of how things are going. Many respondents prefer choosing from a handful of short options versus typing on their phones, especially for straightforward topics or when kicking off a longer feedback session.

Question: How useful do you find your advisory or homeroom period so far?

  • Very useful

  • Somewhat useful

  • Neutral

  • Not very useful

  • Not at all useful

Question: What is your favorite part of advisory/homeroom?

  • Getting academic help

  • Socializing with classmates

  • Guidance from my advisor/teacher

  • Free time/relaxation

  • Other

Question: How often do you participate in advisory or homeroom activities?

  • Always

  • Usually

  • Sometimes

  • Rarely

  • Never

When to followup with "why?" Following up a multiple-choice question with a "why?" gets at the story behind their choice—for example, if a student selects "Not very useful," a well-timed "Can you share why?" encourages honest, actionable feedback and brings context you’d otherwise miss.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Add "Other" when you want to avoid forcing a student into a box—or when you suspect you may not have covered all experiences. Follow-up questions after "Other" responses often reveal unexpected needs, ideas, or pain points.

Using NPS questions in advisory or homeroom surveys

The Net Promoter Score (NPS) isn’t just for products and brands; it’s perfect for measuring overall satisfaction with advisory or homeroom, too. NPS asks: "On a scale from 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend advisory/homeroom to other students?" It's simple, widely understood, and gives you a benchmark to monitor over time. Considering that 60% of K-12 teachers now use AI tools—saving hours each week [2]—it makes sense to combine familiar metrics with modern, AI-driven follow-up for deeper insights. Try generating an NPS survey for high school freshman students about advisory or homeroom usefulness instantly with Specific.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions are the key to richer feedback. Instead of surface-level answers, you get context, emotion, and specifics—without endless email chasing. We designed Specific to automate smart probing: our AI listens to each response, then asks sharp, relevant follow-ups, like an expert interviewer (see the feature in action here). The result? More natural conversations and much richer insights.

  • Student: "It’s fine, I guess."

  • AI follow-up: "Can you tell me what makes it just ‘fine’ for you? Is there anything you’d like to see improved?"

This avoids vague feedback and opens the door to details that drive real improvement.

How many followups to ask? In most cases, 2-3 followups are enough to uncover depth without overwhelming students. If you hit your goal (or the response is clear enough), you can set the survey to skip to the next question with Specific’s settings—keeping the experience smooth and student-friendly.

This makes it a conversational survey. Instead of a static form, you get a dynamic, back-and-forth dialogue—and students notice the difference.

AI survey response analysis: Even with lots of open-ended feedback, you can analyze and summarize survey responses with AI in minutes, surfacing trends and key takeaways automatically.

These smart followups are a big leap forward—give them a try and generate your own advisory or homeroom survey to see the difference.

How to prompt ChatGPT or AI to generate great survey questions

Don’t be shy about leaning on AI to spark question ideas—just be clear in your instructions and give plenty of context. For a quick start, try:

Prompt for basics:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for High School Freshman Student survey about Advisory Or Homeroom Usefulness.

To go deeper, always add context about your goals, your students, and your priorities. For example:

We want to improve advisory and homeroom periods for high school freshmen at our school. Please suggest 10 open-ended questions that help us understand students’ real feelings, what works, and what needs changing.

Next, let the AI help organize:

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

Finally, drill down into what matters most:

Generate 10 questions focused on the categories "Student Relationships" and "Academic Support".

What is a conversational survey?

A conversational survey uses chat-like dialogue, powered by AI, to create an engaging and responsive experience for both students and researchers. Instead of a dry, static form, these surveys feel more like real conversations—especially valuable for high school freshmen, who crave authenticity and hate filling out boring forms.

With AI survey generators like Specific, you skip the pain of fiddling with boxes, dropdowns, and endless setup. Just describe your goal (or paste a prompt), and let the AI do the heavy lifting. You can even adapt your survey by chatting with the AI survey editor as your needs evolve—no technical skills required. The AI survey maker unlocks rapid, effective survey launches with minimal effort.

Manual Surveys

AI-Generated Surveys

Time-consuming setup, manual edits

Instant creation via chat or prompt

Static, one-size-fits-all forms

Conversational, dynamic, easy to personalize

Little/no follow-up without extra work

Automated probing and clarification

Difficult response analysis

AI-powered analysis and summaries

Why use AI for high school freshman student surveys? The way young people interact with technology is changing fast: 66% of students regularly use ChatGPT, and 86% rely on AI for their studies overall [1]. AI-driven surveys not only fit their habits but also surface candid, richer responses thanks to follow-up prompts and analysis automation. You can learn more about creating a survey with Specific in this step-by-step tutorial.

At Specific, we’re committed to providing the best-in-class conversational survey experience—making the feedback process smooth, modern, and actually enjoyable for you and your respondents.

See this advisory or homeroom usefulness survey example now

Start your survey in seconds—gather authentic feedback, enjoy smart follow-ups, and easily analyze results with AI. Discover how conversational surveys boost response rates and deliver richer insights for your school community.

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Sources

  1. EdTechReview. Students Use AI Tools In Their Studies Reveals Survey by Digital Education Council

  2. AP News. U.S. K-12 teachers use AI tools – Gallup and Walton Family Foundation survey

  3. SurveyMonkey. AI in Higher Education study

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.