
The questions your IR office asks determine the decisions your institution can make. Ask vague questions and you get vanity data; ask precise ones and you get a roadmap. Here are 12 worth building your 2026 instruments around.
Key takeaways
- The best higher education survey questions are specific, tied to a decision owner, and consistent enough to benchmark over time.
- Blend relational metrics (belonging, likelihood to recommend) with driver questions (advising, cost, workload) and at least one open-ended item.
- Keep scales consistent, a mixed bag of 5-point and 10-point scales makes trend analysis painful.
- Only ask what you’ll act on; every question needs an owner and a possible intervention.
How to use these questions
These aren’t meant to be dropped into one giant survey. Distribute them across lifecycle instruments, onboarding, mid-term, annual experience, and exit, using survey logic so each student sees a relevant, short subset. Where possible, keep wording identical year over year so your IR office can benchmark trends rather than restart from zero each cycle.
Belonging and engagement
Belonging is one of the strongest predictors of persistence, which is why it leads this list.
1. Sense of belonging
“I feel like I belong at this institution.”, 5-point agreement scale (Strongly disagree → Strongly agree)
Track this every term. A drop in a specific cohort is an early retention warning.
2. Meaningful connection
“There is at least one faculty or staff member who knows me and supports my success.”, Yes / Not yet / Unsure
Students with a single meaningful campus relationship persist at higher rates. This question tells you who lacks one.
3. Likelihood to recommend
“How likely are you to recommend this institution to a prospective student?”, 0-10 scale
A higher-ed Net Promoter-style item gives you a single relational trend metric to watch across years.
Academic experience
4. Academic challenge and support balance
“My coursework challenges me while giving me the support I need to succeed.”, 5-point agreement
This catches both under-rigor and unsupported rigor, two very different problems with the same retention risk.
5. Advising quality
“My academic advisor helps me make good decisions about my path.”, 5-point agreement
Advising is one of the highest-leverage, most fixable drivers of satisfaction. Measure it explicitly and by advisor group.
6. Clarity of path to graduation
“I clearly understand what I need to do to graduate on time.”, 5-point agreement
Confusion about requirements quietly extends time-to-degree and inflates cost. Low scores point to advising or catalog problems.
Financial and access
7. Financial confidence
“I am confident I can afford to continue my education here next year.”, 5-point agreement
Cost is a leading reason students stop out. A low score here, flagged in real time, lets financial aid intervene before a student disappears.
8. Awareness of support resources
“I know where to go for help with academic, financial, or personal challenges.”, 5-point agreement
Underused support services usually reflect an awareness gap, not a quality gap. This question separates the two.
Wellbeing and experience
9. Wellbeing check
“In the past two weeks, stress or wellbeing challenges have interfered with my ability to succeed academically.”, Never / Rarely / Sometimes / Often / Always
Pair this with clear, always-visible support resources and a routing rule for high-risk responses. Handle it with care and appropriate confidentiality.
10. Technology and digital experience
“The institution’s technology (LMS, portals, wifi) supports rather than hinders my learning.”, 5-point agreement
Digital friction is invisible to leadership but constant for students. Embedding this in a Canvas, Moodle, or Brightspace pulse captures it in context.
Outcomes and open feedback
11. Career and outcome confidence
“My experience here is preparing me for my career or next step.”, 5-point agreement
Outcome perception increasingly drives enrollment decisions and alumni sentiment. Track it before students graduate, not just after.
12. The one open-ended question
“What is one thing we could change to improve your experience?”, Open text
Every instrument should carry exactly one high-quality open-ended prompt. Modern text and sentiment analytics cluster thousands of responses into themes automatically, so this scales without drowning your IR office in reading.
Turning answers into action
Great questions are wasted without a workflow behind them. Route responses to owners in real time, benchmark core items year over year, and segment results by cohort and program in your dashboards so patterns, not just individual responses, surface for institutional research and student success teams. As you scale across departments, matching program scope to budget is easier when you review QuestionPro pricing alongside your rollout plan.
Want these 12 questions preloaded with the right scales and logic? Get the question bank and start with a ready-to-deploy IR question bank.
Frequently asked questions
What are the most important higher education survey questions?
The most important higher education survey questions measure belonging, advising quality, financial confidence, clarity of the path to graduation, and likelihood to recommend, because each is a strong, actionable predictor of student persistence and satisfaction.
How many questions should a student survey have?
Keep each instrument short, typically under 5 minutes, and distribute questions across lifecycle surveys using skip logic so students see only relevant items. A focused set of well-chosen questions outperforms one long survey on both response rate and data quality.
Should we use 5-point or 10-point scales?
Consistency matters more than the specific choice. Use 5-point agreement scales for most driver questions and reserve a 0-10 scale for your single relational “likelihood to recommend” metric, then keep those choices stable year over year for reliable benchmarking.
How can IR offices analyze open-ended responses at scale?
Use text and sentiment analytics to automatically cluster open-ended responses into themes, turning thousands of free-text comments into ranked, actionable topics rather than raw text no one has time to read.



