The questions from the committee come ahead of its plans to go to the States with proposals to change the arrangements approved by the previous Assembly, which are set to run for just two terms from January.
The first of the questions will ask how pre-school entitlement should be funded, with options in the survey for it to be completely free and funded by the States, not funded at all by the government, or part-funded by the States with pre-schools able to charge a top-up.
The currently agreed entitlement is for 15 hours of free universal pre-school education for all three- and four-year-olds in the year before they start school.
However, in September, Education president Paul Le Pelley announced his committee was looking to alter these plans, after the initial two terms, and bring proposals to allow providers to charge extra through top-up fees.
He has also said that changes might involve a lower qualifying cap, based on parental income, to determine who gets the provision.
The news faced a backlash from some politicians, who have vowed to fight any proposals brought back to the Assembly.