Create your survey

Create your survey

Create your survey

Best questions for teacher survey about hybrid teaching

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

·

Aug 19, 2025

Create your survey

Here are some of the best questions for a teacher survey about hybrid teaching—and tips on how to craft them for deeper insights. You can instantly build a teacher survey about hybrid teaching using Specific’s AI-powered tools.

Best open-ended questions for a teacher survey about hybrid teaching

Open-ended questions are your go-to for uncovering nuanced perspectives and the unexpected. They invite teachers to share stories, context, and ideas you may not have considered—even though they can sometimes prompt higher nonresponse rates, the richness of feedback is often worth it. According to Pew Research Center, open-ended survey questions can have nonresponse rates up to 18% on average, but their qualitative value is high: In one Danish study, 80.7% of managers rated open-ended teacher comments as useful or very useful when analyzing experiences. [1][2]

  1. What has been your biggest success while teaching in a hybrid environment?

  2. Which challenges have you faced when balancing in-person and remote students?

  3. What tools or resources have helped you most during hybrid teaching?

  4. How do you adapt your lesson plans for both classroom and online learners?

  5. What types of support or training do you wish you had received before starting hybrid teaching?

  6. Can you share an example of a lesson that worked particularly well (or not) in a hybrid format?

  7. What do you need the most from your administration to make hybrid teaching effective?

  8. How do you and your students stay motivated and engaged during hybrid sessions?

  9. What feedback have you received from students or parents about hybrid learning?

  10. If you could change one thing about the hybrid teaching experience, what would it be?

Carefully balancing open-ended and closed-ended questions ensures you get depth—without fatiguing your respondents. For some more practical advice, see our guide to creating a teacher survey about hybrid teaching and understand how these questions can fit seamlessly into your next survey project.

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for a teacher survey about hybrid teaching

Single-select multiple-choice questions are perfect when you want to quantify opinions or spot clear trends. They’re easy to answer, provide structured data, and can serve as an icebreaker—then you can dig deeper with a followup question. Use these to gauge consensus or highlight a pain point before inviting teachers to elaborate.

Question: How confident do you feel about managing a hybrid classroom?

  • Very confident

  • Somewhat confident

  • Neutral

  • Somewhat unconfident

  • Very unconfident

Question: What has been your primary challenge with hybrid teaching?

  • Student engagement

  • Technology issues

  • Balancing workload

  • Assessment and grading

  • Other

Question: How often do you receive support or guidance for hybrid teaching issues?

  • Frequently

  • Occasionally

  • Rarely

  • Never

When to followup with "why?" Whenever a response hints at deeper reasoning—such as “Technology issues” as a challenge—ask, “Why do you think technology has been an issue for you?” This opens the door for vivid stories or the kind of feedback you simply can’t get from choices alone.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Add "Other" whenever listed options might not capture every experience, especially in fast-evolving educational settings. A followup question like “Please specify what other challenges you’re facing” can reveal completely new issues you hadn’t anticipated.

NPS: Measuring advocacy for hybrid teaching

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a simple, research-backed way to measure how likely teachers are to recommend hybrid teaching to peers. It’s a one-question pulse that quantifies sentiment—and the real value comes when you pair it with open followup questions to understand the “why” behind each score. For teachers adapting to new models, this lets you benchmark satisfaction and spot the silent pain points or bright spots.

You can generate an NPS survey for hybrid teaching with a single click using Specific’s templates.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions are where you get past surface-level answers and move into true discovery. Automating these, as Specific does in its AI followup questions feature, is what makes a simple AI survey conversational—and dramatically more insightful. The AI listens to what’s just been said and probes naturally, saving you the post-survey email chain and gathering full context right away.

  • Teacher: “Balancing online and in-person students is difficult.”

  • AI follow-up: “Can you share a specific example when this was especially challenging?”

How many followups to ask? In most cases, 2–3 followups are enough to extract meaningful detail. There’s value in not overdoing it, and with Specific, you can automatically stop the conversation once you’ve got what you need.

This makes it a conversational survey: The teacher feels heard, the AI interviewer is responsive, and the conversation—rather than a checklist—drives the depth of feedback.

AI survey response analysis: Even with lots of unstructured feedback, AI makes analyzing responses a breeze. See how we break down and summarize qualitative answers in our guide to analyzing teacher survey responses and through the powerful AI survey response analysis tool.

Automated followups are a totally different experience—generate your survey and see for yourself how the conversation flows and insights deepen.

How to prompt ChatGPT for great teacher survey questions on hybrid teaching

Let’s say you want AI to suggest questions for your survey—prompts matter. Here’s a great starting prompt:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for a teacher survey about hybrid teaching.

You always get better results with more context. Try something like:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for a teacher survey about hybrid teaching. I’m collecting feedback from K-12 educators to improve resource allocation, training, and student outcomes. The survey should cover challenges, successes, and recommendations.

Once you have your draft questions, use AI to categorize them:

Look at the questions and categorize them. Output categories with the questions under them.

After reviewing those categories, you might want to double down on the most vital area:

Generate 10 questions for categories such as “Technology Challenges” and “Student Engagement”.

What is a conversational survey?

An AI-powered conversational survey feels more like chatting with a knowledgeable colleague than ticking boxes on a form. The magic lies in how every answer gets treated as a cue for a followup—just like a real conversation. While manual survey creation requires guessing which questions (and followups) to ask, AI survey generators like Specific do the heavy lifting, adapting in real time.

Manual Surveys

AI-Generated Surveys

Fixed questions, no probing

Dynamic followups, conversational flow

Requires lots of manual editing

Edit via simple chat interface

Difficult to analyze qualitative data

AI instantly summarizes & categorizes feedback

Often feels impersonal

Feels like a real conversation

Why use AI for teacher surveys? Teachers’ time is precious and their feedback lives in the details. An AI survey example draws out this context without extra work on either side—and Specific’s conversational surveys make it seamless for everyone to engage.

If you want to see how it all fits together, our guide to creating a hybrid teaching survey walks you through every step.

Specific stands out for its effortless, best-in-class experience—letting you launch a conversational survey in seconds and making both creation and response frictionless.

See this hybrid teaching survey example now

Experience the new standard for teacher feedback—see this hybrid teaching survey, crafted for smarter conversations and actionable insights.

Create your survey

Try it out. It's fun!

Sources

  1. Pew Research Center. Why do some open-ended survey questions result in higher item nonresponse rates than others?

  2. PubMed. Patient-reported comments in patient satisfaction surveys – useful feedback for quality improvement?

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.