When creating a survey, you should consider who your audience will be and make questions clear and concise for them. Questions should not consist of multiple questions within one, this will confuse the respondent and affect your feedback. While asking quality questions is important, it is also key to organize the survey. Surveys should be uncluttered and easy to follow along. It is suggested that there should only be one question per line to avoid this. Additionally, demographic questions should go towards the end of a survey to avoid respondents being turned away from completing the survey. For an experiment on family involvement using family fun times activities, my research question is “Do family fun time activities affect/influence family involvement?” In order to study my dependent variable of family involvement, I will ask “How involved did you feel with your family during this activity?” A specific theme I would like to focus on is education. In order to gain feedback, I will ask parents “What is your highest level of completed education?” This question will be focused towards the end of the survey. These are good questions to ask parents because they are simple, clear, and not too personal or sensitive.