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Top 10 Questions to Ask During a School Tour for Parents

Category: Skoodos

Top 10 Questions to Ask During a School Tour for Parents

Key questions every parent should ask before choosing a school

Let me say this the way most parents feel it—but don’t always say out loud.mSchool visits are confusing. Not because schools are bad. But because everything looks fine.
Nothing feels obviously wrong. But nothing feels clearly right either. You walk through corridors, see neat classrooms, hear about “holistic development” and still come back unsure. That’s normal. Because the real answers are not in what schools say. They’re in what you notice and in the kind of questions to ask during a school tour that go a little deeper than the usual ones.

This guide isn’t about sounding smart or prepared. It’s about asking what you genuinely want to know, in your own words, and slowly understanding whether a place feels right for your child. You can always explore schools on platforms like Skoodos to shortlist options. But when you’re standing inside a school, that’s your only chance to really read it.

 

Start With This Thought (It Helps More Than Any Checklist)

You’re not choosing a school based on one visit. You’re trying to answer one simple question: “Can my child spend years here and feel okay?” That’s it. Not impressed. Not pressured. Just, okay, in a good way.

 

The Questions (Ask Them Like You’d Ask a Friend)

You don’t need perfect language. Just ask simply.

 

1. “How do classes usually happen here?”

Not the official version. The real one. You’re trying to picture:

  • What does a child experience in those 40 minutes?
  • Are they just listening, or also thinking and speaking?

If you can, pause near a classroom. Even half a minute gives you a clearer answer than most explanations.

 

2. “If a child is struggling, what do you usually do?”

Every child struggles at some point. That’s not a problem.

What matters is:

  • Does the school notice early?
  • Do they step in?
  • Or does the child quietly fall behind?

You don’t need big promises. You’re just listening for whether they’ve thought about this properly.

 

3. “How will I know how my child is doing?”

Because no parent wants to find out everything at the end of the term. Ask:

  • Will I get regular updates?
  • Can I reach out if I’m unsure about something?

You’re checking if communication feels open or distant.

 

4. “How many students are there in a class?”

Don’t overthink the number. Just imagine:

  • Can one teacher realistically notice each child?

Sometimes you’ll get a clear answer. Sometimes a vague one.
Both tell you something.

 

5. “If students have issues, how is it handled?”

Not “strict or not.” That doesn’t help. Ask this instead. You’ll start to understand:

  • Is discipline about fear?
  • Or about helping children learn better behaviour?

That difference stays with a child for years.

 

6. “What does a normal school day feel like?”

Not the best day. Not the annual day. Just a regular one.

  • Are children constantly rushed?
  • Do they get time to breathe?

Because your child won’t live the “highlight version” of school.
They’ll live the everyday life.

 

7. “Do students actually take part in activities?”

Every school says they have activities.

But you can gently ask:

  • How often do students participate?
  • Is it routine or occasional?

You’ll often find that involvement matters more than facilities.

 

8. “Do teachers usually stay here for long?”

You don’t need exact numbers. Just listen. If teachers stay, it usually means:

  • Stability
  • Better understanding of students

If they don’t, there’s usually a reason, even if it’s not said directly.

 

9. “If I need to speak to a teacher, how does that work?”

This is about accessibility.

  • Will it feel easy to reach out?
  • Or formal and restricted?

Many parents compare schools online through Skoodos, but this part you can only feel when you’re there.

 

10. “Apart from fees, what else should we be prepared for?”

This is where being straightforward helps. Ask:

  • Are there extra costs during the year?
  • Do fees increase regularly?

It’s a simple question, but it avoids a lot of stress later.

 

The Quiet Part (Where You Actually Learn the Most)

Some of the most important things won’t be said out loud. You’ll just notice them.

 

Look at the students

  • Do they seem comfortable?
  • Are they speaking naturally?

     

Watch the teachers

  • Do they sound patient?
  • Do they listen properly?

     

Feel the space

  • Calm?
  • Slightly tense?
  • Too controlled?

This is the real part of how to evaluate a school during a visit. Not everything can be explained. Some things you just feel.

 

If You Forget Everything, Just Remember This

You don’t need a long checklist. Just ask yourself:

  • Does learning feel active?
  • Do students look comfortable?
  • Do teachers seem approachable?
  • Does the class size feel okay?
  • Are activities actually happening?
  • Is safety visible?
  • Does communication feel open?
  • Are costs clear?

That’s enough. That’s your real school tour checklist for parents.

 

Things Parents Often Realise Later

These come from real conversations, not theory. “We liked how the school looked.”
Very common. And understandable. “We didn’t notice how quiet the students were.”
Silence can mean discipline or hesitation. “We didn’t ask enough.”
Most parents hold back. You don’t have to.

 

A Small Moment (The Kind You Don’t Plan For)

A parent once said this: Nothing stood out during the tour. No big difference. But during a class, a student asked a question mid-lesson. The teacher paused, smiled, and explained again, slowly. No rush. No irritation. That was enough. They chose that school. Not because it was “better” but because it felt like a place where their child would be heard.

 

How to Decide Without Making It Heavy

You don’t need a complicated system.

  • Visit a few schools
  • Don’t rush your decision
  • Sit with your thoughts for a day or two
  • Notice which place stays in your mind

If you want to simplify things before visiting, you can use Skoodos to shortlist and compare schools so your visits feel more intentional.

 

FAQs (The Way Parents Actually Think About Them)

What questions should I ask on a school tour?

Ask about teaching, support, discipline, communication, and daily routine, nothing fancy.

 

How do I prepare for a school visit?

Just be clear about what matters to you. That’s enough.

 

What should I look for in a school tour?

Look at people, students and teachers, not just buildings.

 

How do I evaluate a school before admission?

Visit a few, compare how they feel, and trust what you consistently notice.

 

What makes a good school for children?

A place where children feel comfortable enough to learn, ask, and be themselves.

 

Conclusion

You won’t walk out of a school with 100% certainty. But you will walk out with a feeling. Don’t ignore that. The right questions to ask during a school tour don’t just give you answers, they help you notice what you might have missed otherwise. So go in calmly. Ask simply.
Observe quietly. And trust the small things. They’re usually the most honest.

 

What You Can Do Next

Shortlist a few schools. Plan your visits. Take your time. And if you want a clearer starting point before stepping out, explore schools on Skoodos, it helps you compare options so your decision feels steady, not rushed.

 


Published on: 09 Apr 2026
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