Exit Ticket Questions

Create concise exit ticket questions to assess immediate understanding.
Education - Assessment - Exit Ticket Questions

Who it's for

Teachers, Educators, Trainers, Tutors, Facilitators

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Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.

How to use this prompt

1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.

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Workflow Prompt

				
					You are creating exit ticket questions.

### Required Input
- Lesson Topic: [e.g. "Fractions addition"]
- Learning Objectives: [e.g. "Add fractions with common denominators"]
- Audience Level: [e.g. elementary]
- Number of Questions: [e.g. 2-5]
- Format: [e.g. short answer, reflection]

### Input Validation
Review inputs.
If objectives are vague, request clarification.
Ensure number of questions fits a 1-3 minute completion window.
Pause until clear.

### Instructions
Identify the single most important takeaway from the lesson.

Design questions that:
- Can be answered quickly (under 2 minutes total)
- Reveal understanding, confusion, or confidence
- Focus on ONE idea per question

Include mix:
- At least 1 knowledge/application check
- At least 1 diagnostic/reflection question

Avoid:
- Multi-step reasoning
- Complex wording
- Overloading learners at end of lesson

### Output
Provide:
1. Exit ticket questions
2. Answer guide (if applicable)
3. What each question reveals
4. Suggested follow-up actions (reteach, move on, group learners)
				
			

Optional advanced instructions

				
					Add one confidence-rating question.
				
			

Example output

Exit Ticket: The Power of 10

Topic: Place Value (Decimals)

Learning Objective: Explain how moving a digit one place to the left changes its value.

Questions

  • 1. Knowledge Check: If I move the digit 5 from the tenths place to the ones place, did the value get 10 times bigger or 10 times smaller?
  • 2. Reflection: On a scale of 1-5, how confident do you feel explaining this to a friend?

Answer Guide

1. 10 times bigger. 2. Student-specific rating.

What it Reveals

Q1 reveals if students understand the base-10 shift direction. Q2 reveals self-efficacy and identifies students who need a 1-on-1 check-in.

[…]”,”

Icebreaker: The Common Thread

Audience: Adult Corporate Learners

Objective: Build rapport and find shared interests.

Instructions

  • Step 1: In your groups of 4, you have 3 minutes to find the most unusual thing you all have in common.
  • Step 2: It cannot be ‘we all work here’ or ‘we all live in Singapore’!
  • Step 3: One person will share your ‘thread’ with the room.

Time & Purpose

Time: 8 Minutes. Purpose: Encourages deep conversation and active listening in a low-pressure environment.

Facilitation Tip

If a group stalls, suggest they talk about hobbies, travel, or first jobs.

[…]”,”

Game: The Vocab Vault

Topic: Ecosystems Vocabulary

Learning Objective: Define and use terms like ‘Biodiversity’ and ‘Sustainability’.

How to Play (Competitive)

  • 1. Split into two teams. One person from Team A comes to the board.
  • 2. I show them a secret vocab word. They must draw it without using letters.
  • 3. Team A has 45 seconds to guess. If they miss, Team B can steal.

Materials

Whiteboard, markers, and a list of 10 key terms.

Facilitation Tip

If drawing is too hard, allow them to act it out (charades style) to keep the energy high.

[…]”,”

Group Activity: The Persona Builder

Topic: Target Audience Research

Learning Objective: Create a detailed customer persona for a local business.

Opening Script

‘Welcome back! Today, you are deep-diving into the mind of your customer. Your goal is to move from a generic “person” to a specific “persona” with needs and pain points.’

Instructions

  • Step 1: Choose a local Singaporean cafe. (2 mins)
  • Step 2: Brainstorm 3 daily frustrations this customer faces. (5 mins)
  • Step 3: Draft a 1-sentence “Solution Statement” for them. (5 mins)

Roles

  • Facilitator: Keeps time.
  • Note-taker: Records frustrations.
  • Presenter: Shares the solution.

[…]”,”

Role Play: The Refund Request

Topic: Professional Communication

Learning Objective: Practice de-escalation and empathy.

Scenario

A customer is upset because their online order arrived damaged, and they have a party tonight.

Opening Script

‘We are practicing empathy under pressure. Remember: The goal isn’t just to follow the rules, but to make the customer feel heard.’

Role Instructions

  • Employee: Use ‘I’ statements and offer two clear options.
  • Customer: Be firm but stay within the role—no shouting.

Debrief Questions

  • ‘What was the exact moment the customer’s tone changed?’
  • ‘Which phrase felt most helpful?’

[…]”,”

Debate: The AI Classroom

Motion: AI tools should be mandatory in all secondary school writing assignments.

Learning Objective: Develop balanced arguments on technology ethics.

Structure

  • Proposing Side (For): 3 minutes
  • Opposing Side (Against): 3 minutes
  • Rebuttals: 2 minutes each

Opening Script

‘Today we tackle a debate that affects your daily lives. Regardless of your personal view, you must defend your assigned side using at least two pieces of evidence.’

Facilitation Tip

If arguments get repetitive, prompt with: ‘How does this affect students who don’t have high-speed internet at home?’

[…]”,”

Think-Pair-Share: Urban Heat

Topic: Singapore’s Urban Heat Island Effect

Learning Objective: Propose one cooling solution for a high-density neighborhood.

Instructions

  • Think: (90 seconds) Write down one way a building can be designed to stay cool without AC.
  • Pair: (2 minutes) Share your idea with your neighbor. Pick the strongest one.
  • Share: (3 minutes) Each pair shares their best idea in 10 words or less.

Opening Script

‘Eyes on the screen. Think silently for 90 seconds. No talking yet—I want to see your pens moving.’

Transition

‘Now, turn to your partner. Which idea would work best in a Jurong housing estate?’

[…]”,”

Problem-Based Learning: The Flooded Path

Topic: Civil Engineering Basics

Learning Objective: Evaluate drainage solutions for a park prone to flooding.

Problem Scenario

The local community park’s main walkway floods after every tropical rainstorm. You have a $5,000 budget and three material options: gravel, porous concrete, or a rain garden.

Instructions

  • Stage 1: Analyze the cost vs. durability of each…

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