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Best questions for high school junior student survey about tutoring and academic support

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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 junior student survey about tutoring and academic support, plus tips to build them effectively. Specific can help you build or generate a smart, conversational survey in seconds.

Best open-ended questions for high school juniors on tutoring and academic support

Open-ended questions are your go-to tool for capturing rich, detailed insights. They invite high school juniors to share experiences in their own words—opening up conversations that multiple choice just can't reach. Use them at the start of your survey, when you want to explore broad themes or uncover new ideas students care about most. With the right open-ended questions, you'll surface context and storytelling that structured answers miss.

  1. What challenges have you faced this year that made you consider seeking tutoring or academic support?

  2. Can you describe a time when academic support, like tutoring, made a difference in your learning?

  3. What factors make it easy or hard for you to access tutoring services at our school?

  4. If you've used tutoring or support programs, what worked well—and what do you wish could improve?

  5. How do you prefer to receive academic help (in-person, online, group sessions, one-on-one, etc.), and why?

  6. What would make you more likely to participate in academic support programs?

  7. Are there subjects where you feel the most support is needed? Tell us about those experiences.

  8. How do you balance academic work with other responsibilities, and how does that affect your interest in tutoring?

  9. What’s your ideal vision for academic support at our school?

  10. Is there anything else you’d like to share about your needs or experiences with tutoring and academic support?

Using open-ended questions lets students communicate real obstacles or successes in their own words. This approach is especially powerful when combined with follow-up questions, which are a hallmark of conversational surveys—and a feature Specific automates seamlessly.

It's worth noting that new technologies are deeply changing the feedback landscape. A recent study showed that 60% of teachers have incorporated AI into their regular teaching routines—a sign that not only educational delivery but also how we gather feedback is evolving fast. [1]

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for high school junior student surveys

Single-select multiple-choice questions are perfect when you need quick, structured data—great for quantifying trends across large numbers of responses. For high school juniors, they're invaluable when you want to measure preferences, identify the biggest barriers to support, or get a sense of how widespread certain experiences are. Often, these become conversation starters: students select an answer and you can follow up for more detail with automated probing.

Question: What is your main reason for seeking academic support?

  • I’m struggling with specific subjects

  • I want to improve my grades overall

  • I need help with study skills or time management

  • I haven’t sought support

Question: Which format do you prefer for tutoring sessions?

  • In-person one-on-one

  • Group in-person sessions

  • Online virtual sessions

  • Other

Question: How often do you use academic support programs?

  • Weekly

  • Monthly

  • Only before exams or projects

  • Never used

When to follow up with "why?" It’s smart to ask “why?” in a followup whenever a student’s choice needs context—like selecting “Never used” for support programs. This extra step transforms a simple selection into a richer insight, revealing what barriers or beliefs are at play. For example, after a student selects “Online virtual sessions,” you might follow up: “Why do you prefer online sessions over in-person options?”

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Always include “Other” when your options might not cover every scenario. It respects respondent diversity and, through followups, can uncover insights you never expected—maybe there’s a new tutoring initiative or unique learning style you hadn’t considered.

Should you use an NPS-style question for academic support?

NPS (Net Promoter Score) measures how likely someone is to recommend a service or experience. For academic support, asking high school juniors “How likely are you to recommend our tutoring services to a friend?” gives you a single, powerful score of overall satisfaction and loyalty. NPS surveys simplify benchmarking over time—so if you’re working to improve your support programs, you’ll clearly see progress and pain points. Try building an NPS survey for high school juniors about tutoring with Specific’s NPS survey builder.

There’s evidence this works: AI chatbots are now used by 60% of universities to answer student queries, streamlining support and feedback in ways classic forms can’t touch. [2]

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions are the secret sauce for conversational surveys. With automated follow-ups (like Specific’s AI-powered system), your survey adapts, asks meaningful clarifiers, and gets deeper context—just like a skilled interviewer. This keeps high school juniors engaged and helps uncover details that static questions miss. Automated follow-up questions save a huge amount of time; you don’t have to email or chase users afterwards. Plus, the conversation feels more real, reducing survey fatigue and improving response quality.

  • Student: “I prefer online sessions.”

  • AI follow-up: “Can you share what you like most about online tutoring versus in-person support?”

  • Student: “I haven’t used any support services.”

  • AI follow-up: “Could you tell us what’s stopped you from trying academic support so far?”

How many followups to ask? As a general rule, 2–3 follow-ups are enough to capture key context—but the ability to skip or advance after collecting the desired information is crucial. Specific lets you set this up, so the AI never overdoes probing or wastes student time.

This makes it a conversational survey, where replies and questions flow naturally, keeping juniors engaged and revealing context traditional forms can’t access.

Easy AI analysis. Despite all that open text, analyzing survey responses is simple with AI tools—check out our guide to AI-powered response analysis—so you’ll never drown in qualitative data again.

Automated probing is a new way to uncover richer insights. Try generating a conversational survey to see this in action.

How to prompt ChatGPT or other AI to create great survey questions

If you’re brainstorming your own questions or just want an AI to flesh out options, prompting GPT-models well is key. Start simple—then get more powerful with added context. Here’s a basic prompt:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for high school junior student survey about tutoring and academic support.

Want stronger results? Always add context—like your goals, school setting, or what you want to do with the answers:

We are planning to improve our tutoring program at a large suburban high school. Suggest 10 open-ended questions for high school junior students, focusing on how they perceive academic support, what barriers they experience, and which formats work best for them.

Once you’ve created a list, categorize them for structure:

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

From there, explore specific themes by writing:

Generate 10 questions for categories “Barriers to Support” and “Preferred Support Formats”.

What is a conversational survey, and how does AI survey generation change the process?

Conversational surveys aren’t just forms—they feel like a live chat, where each response guides the next question. This AI-driven, adaptive format is a game-changer for feedback: it’s more engaging for students and generates more insightful, complete responses, with real-time clarifiers and nuanced followups. In contrast, old-school surveys are rigid; if someone gives a vague answer, you’re left guessing, or you have to follow up later by email.

Manual Surveys

AI-Generated Conversational Surveys

Rigid, static forms; no adaption to response

Adaptive, real-time follow-up by AI

High risk of incomplete data

Richer context via probing questions

Slow to analyze (especially text)

Instant AI-powered analysis and summaries

Can feel impersonal or boring

Feels like a real chat—much more engaging

Why use AI for high school junior surveys? The numbers speak for themselves—AI-driven adaptive learning platforms have increased student engagement rates by 40%. That level of engagement translates directly to survey feedback, especially when paired with AI-powered conversational surveys. [3] By leveraging GPT-based chat and instant analysis, you collect honest, nuanced insights in less time, with less effort—something classic forms will never match.

Specific makes the entire process seamless, especially if you want to try a real AI survey example built from scratch, or use a pre-made prompt for high school juniors and tutoring support. For a step-by-step approach, read our guide to creating a high school junior student survey about tutoring support and discover why so many educators prefer this experience.

Our platform delivers best-in-class, frictionless conversational surveys—making it easy for both survey creators and the high school students who respond.

See this tutoring and academic support survey example now

Ready to collect meaningful input from high school juniors about tutoring and academic support? See how a conversational survey can transform your approach and start gathering deep insights—without the hassle of classic forms. Create your own survey and experience the power of automated follow-ups and instant AI-driven analysis.

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Sources

  1. Engageli. AI in Education Statistics: How AI Is Transforming Teaching & Learning

  2. Zipdo. AI in the Education Industry: Key Statistics 2023

  3. Zipdo. AI in the Education Industry: Student engagement and adaptive learning

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.