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Best questions for high school sophomore student survey about teacher support

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Adam Sabla

·

Aug 29, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a high school sophomore student survey about teacher support—and how to create them effectively. If you want to build a tailored, AI-powered feedback survey in seconds, you can instantly generate your own with Specific.

The best open-ended questions for high school sophomore surveys about teacher support

If you want to dig beneath the surface and really understand student perceptions, open-ended questions deliver the most unfiltered answers. These are perfect for uncovering stories, unmet needs, or new ideas—and for explaining the “why” behind survey scores. We recommend open-ended formats in your AI survey, especially when exploring student experiences in depth.

  1. Can you share an example of a time when a teacher went out of their way to help you understand something?

  2. What qualities make a teacher feel the most supportive to you?

  3. How would you describe an ideal relationship between students and teachers in your school?

  4. When do you feel least supported by your teachers? What’s missing in those moments?

  5. Are there specific things your teachers do that make learning easier or harder for you?

  6. How comfortable do you feel asking teachers for extra help or clarification? Why?

  7. If you could change one thing about the way teachers support sophomores, what would it be?

  8. What’s one piece of advice you would share with teachers to support students better?

  9. How do teachers typically respond when students struggle emotionally, not just academically?

  10. Is there something teachers often overlook about sophomore students’ needs? Please explain.

Open-ended questions help you move from broad opinions to concrete examples, themes, and suggestions. For even deeper insights, leverage smart follow-ups—as Specific does automatically—to clarify or expand on student comments.

The best single-select multiple-choice questions for high school sophomore surveys about teacher support

Sometimes you need structured data or want to “warm up” the conversation. Single-select multiple-choice questions shine here—letting sophomores respond quickly, quantify their feedback, or easily signal their top-of-mind issue. In fact, 46% of students in grades 10 to 12 report using AI tools for assignments, showing just how familiar they are with digital and interactive formats [1]. These questions are an excellent way to start or anchor your conversational survey.

Question: How supported do you feel by your teachers this year?

  • Very supported

  • Somewhat supported

  • Not very supported

  • Not at all supported

Question: What type of teacher support do you value most?

  • Academic help

  • Emotional support

  • Encouragement/motivation

  • Flexible deadlines/accommodations

  • Other

Question: How easy is it for you to approach teachers with concerns?

  • Very easy

  • Somewhat easy

  • Somewhat difficult

  • Very difficult

When to follow up with “why?” If a sophomore picks “Not very supported” or “Very difficult,” that’s the perfect moment to follow up with “Why do you feel this way?” or “Can you share an example?” Follow-ups dig past surface ratings and turn basic data into real insight.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Always include "Other" when you suspect your list of choices isn’t exhaustive or you want truly student-centered results. When a student selects "Other," a follow-up—"What did we miss?"—often uncovers surprising perspectives or new support types you hadn’t listed, giving you actionable, unexpected insights.

Should you use NPS-style questions with high school sophomores about teacher support?

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a classic benchmark for customer loyalty, but it’s highly effective in education too—gauging overall satisfaction and student advocacy. For high school sophomore surveys on teacher support, NPS distills student sentiment into a clear, trackable metric: “On a scale of 0-10, how likely are you to recommend your teachers’ support to other students?” 92% of UK undergraduates now use generative AI, a sign that digital and feedback-driven approaches really resonate in schools [2]. An NPS question combined with AI-powered follow-ups captures both quantitative and qualitative trends.

If you want to try a ready-to-go NPS question, check out this NPS survey builder.

The power of follow-up questions

Automated follow-up questions are where conversational AI really shines. Instead of missing key details, you get deeper stories and context with almost zero manual effort. If you’re curious about how AI handles this, take a look at our in-depth guide on AI-powered follow-up questions.

Specific’s survey engine uses AI to ask tailored, real-time follow-ups—just like a seasoned interviewer would. The result: a smooth flow that naturally digs deeper, clarifies ambiguous statements, and elicits complete responses. Imagine emailing every student to ask for clarification—not practical! Automated follow-ups save countless hours while engaging students in a real conversation.

  • Student: "Some teachers help, but sometimes I don’t get what they’re saying."

  • AI follow-up: "Can you share a recent example of a time when you felt confused in class? What did the teacher do, and what could have helped more?"

How many followups to ask? Balance depth with fatigue. In most cases, 2–3 targeted follow-ups per question are enough. It’s also best to allow the survey to move on early if the main point is clear—Specific lets you set this, ensuring every conversation feels personalized, not robotic.

This makes it a conversational survey: Instead of firing off isolated questions, the flow adapts and feels like a real chat. That’s what makes a conversational survey so much more appealing and effective with high school students.

Easy analysis, AI makes it simple: When you have rich, open-ended responses, AI-powered tools like Specific’s survey response analysis turn unstructured feedback into themes, summaries, and actionable to-dos with just a prompt. No need to wade through walls of text yourself.

Never tried automated follow-ups before? Generate a survey and experience how the right probe brings out better answers—no interviewer required.

How to write AI prompts for better survey questions

If you want to use ChatGPT, Specific’s AI survey generator, or other AI tools to build high school sophomore surveys about teacher support, start with a simple prompt:

For broad brainstorming:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for High School Sophomore Student survey about Teacher Support.

If you want more tailored results, always add details: describe your goals, what you want to learn, and information about your survey’s audience.

We’re surveying high school sophomores about teacher support to improve our school’s programs. Please suggest 10 open-ended questions that reveal both strengths and gaps in current teacher support practices, making students feel comfortable enough to be candid.

Next, ask the AI to organize your ideas for clarity:

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

From there, pick the categories that matter most. For deeper dives, prompt again:

Generate 10 questions for categories “Student-Teacher Communication” and “Academic Support”.

The more context you supply, the higher the quality of the AI-generated survey questions you’ll get—making your job smoother from start to finish.

What is a conversational survey—and why go conversational with AI?

Conversational surveys feel like a chat, not a form. They adapt based on each response, ask personalized follow-ups, and yield richer feedback than static checklists. AI-powered survey builders like Specific fundamentally change how you collect and analyze student feedback—no more guesswork, no cold, rigid forms.

Manual Surveys

AI-generated (Conversational) Surveys

Static, one-size-fits-all

Adaptive, feels human and relevant

Hard to build complex or long surveys

Easy to create by chatting with AI

Difficult to analyze open-ended responses by hand

Instant, AI-driven insights and summaries

Tedious follow-up needed via email or in person

Automated follow-ups capture context in real time

Why use AI for high school sophomore student surveys? Because today’s students—63% of teens in the U.S.—are already using AI chatbots to help with school assignments [3]. Conversational and AI-driven experiences meet students where they are, giving you more honest, higher-quality feedback, and making the experience comfortable rather than intimidating.

Try it for yourself: see our step-by-step guide on creating a survey. You’ll see why Specific offers the smoothest and most flexible conversational survey experience for both researchers and students. Smart, real-time AI lets you move from idea to actionable insights—no manual analysis or laborious editing needed.

See this teacher support survey example now

See how easy it is to go from prompt to a ready-to-use student feedback survey powered by conversational AI. Experience the difference, capture deeper insights, and connect authentically with your students—start your high school sophomore teacher support survey today.

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Sources

  1. HumanizeAI. 2025 survey: 46% of students in grades 10-12 use AI agents or tools for homework.

  2. Financial Times. In 2025, 92% of UK undergraduates use generative AI, up from 66% the year before.

  3. What’s The Big Data. 2024 survey: 63% of U.S. teenagers use AI-powered chatbots for schoolwork.

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.