About this survey

Thank you for agreeing to participate in this survey.
The aim of this survey is to provide Cool.org with important information about our impact as a social enterprise and how educators use the Cool.org resources.
Whilst Cool.org can see how many times each resource is downloaded, we would like to estimate how many students/children are taught using our resources.
Your feedback is very important as it helps us determine how our resources are being used and how it is impacting children’s learning.

GoodWolf Partners is supporting the design, development and analysis of this survey. Your responses and individual information are confidential, and none of your responses will be identifiable, but rather used in aggregate with all other survey responses. Your information will be treated confidentially under Cool.org's Privacy Policy. Your participation in this survey is completely voluntary and you can stop the survey at any time.

During the survey, please do not use your browser's FORWARD and BACK buttons. Instead, please always use the "Next" and “Previous” buttons at the bottom of the screen to move forward through the survey. You can save and exit the survey and return at a more convenient time, as long as you use the same device. The survey will take approximately 10 minutes to complete.

​​We will use the following terms of reference throughout this survey:
Visit: Each time you view any page from the Cool.org website
Download: Clicking the 'download worksheet' button for a teacher and/or student resource
Viewed: Clicking the 'view worksheet' button for a teacher and/or student resource
Taught: Taught any part of a Cool.org lesson (ideas or verbatim)
Access(ed): Any combination of having viewed and/or downloaded a Cool.org resource
Resource: Any lesson plan, activity, worksheet, or toolkit on the Cool.org website
Content: Any part of a lesson plan created by Cool.org and/or edited by teachers
Class: A class is a group of students who are generally taught the subject together in the same room. For example, a single school may have 6 different year 9 English classes (depending on the size of the school).
Lesson: A lesson is a single session of teaching. In high school this may correspond to a period (around 40 minutes) in length, although it may be longer or shorter. In primary school, lesson length may vary.
Cool+: The paid premium resources and professional learning on Cool.org.
 
3% of survey complete.

T