Create a survey about bullying

Generate a high-quality conversational survey about bullying in seconds with Specific. Explore AI survey tools, templates, and expert-curated examples to elevate any bullying feedback survey. All tools on this page are part of Specific.

Why use AI for surveys about bullying?

Traditional manual surveys are slow to build, often impersonal, and easily miss the mark—especially when tackling sensitive topics like bullying. An AI survey generator can create nuanced, conversational surveys that adapt in real time. Unlike static forms, AI-driven tools respond contextually, asking follow-up questions that clarify answers and keep the conversation human and relevant. Here’s a quick look:


Manual survey creation

AI-generated survey (Specific)

Time required

Up to several hours

Generate in seconds

Quality of questions

Often generic, risk of bias

Context-aware, expertly crafted

Follow-up depth

None/pre-scripted only

Dynamic, real-time AI probing

Insights quality

Shallow, limited context

Deep, actionable insights

Why use AI for surveys about bullying? Here’s the bottom line: bullying is deeply personal and emotionally charged. Surveys about this topic need empathy and expertise—two things AI can deliver. With the AI survey generator from Specific, you can instantly generate or customize bullying surveys, tapping into expert research logic for more effective feedback. This is critical, considering that research from Stanford shows 90% of 4th to 8th graders report being victims of bullying [2]—we owe them research tools that actually capture what’s happening, in their words.

Specific’s conversational survey experience not only increases response quality, but also makes feedback gathering smoother for both survey creators and respondents. Those who want to see more bullying survey templates, examples, or switch topics entirely can browse all survey audiences and topics here.

How to write questions that give real insight

The quality of your bullying survey depends on the quality of your questions. Most survey builders just recycle generic prompts; Specific’s AI is trained to act like an expert, avoiding bias and vague language. Here’s a quick table showing typical “bad” vs. “good” bullying survey questions:

Bad question

Good question (Specific AI)

Do you ever feel bullied?

Can you tell me about a time this school year when you felt unsafe or left out by other students?

Is your school safe?

What specific situations at school have made you feel uncomfortable or anxious?

Are your teachers helping?

Who do you go to for support when you experience or witness bullying? What happened next?

Specific works differently: its AI draws on expert knowledge to generate unbiased, context-appropriate questions—then builds smart follow-ups to probe for more detail. This means you collect actionable stories, not just yes/no statistics. For example, in Japan, elementary schools reported over 551,000 bullying incidents in one year [3]—but a raw count misses the nuance of students’ day-to-day reality.

If you want to sharpen your own survey skills, start by always avoiding leading questions (“You feel safe here, right?”) and opt for open-ended prompts. But Specific’s AI-powered survey editor takes it a step further—you can describe any changes or needs in plain English, and the AI instantly updates your survey to reflect best practices. Don’t forget, automated follow-up questions (explained below) help drill deeper and keep the conversation meaningful.

Automatic follow-up questions based on previous reply

Most bullying surveys stop at a checklist when what you really need is context. Specific’s automatic AI follow-up questions use GPT-based intelligence to ask clarifying, emotionally sensitive questions in real time—based entirely on the respondent’s previous response. This turns a typical “form” into an actual conversation, unlocking stories and insights you’d otherwise miss.

Let’s say a student says, “Sometimes kids are mean to me at lunch.” A flat survey just records that. But Specific’s AI can follow up instantly with, “Can you share what happened at lunch that made you feel upset? Was there someone you trusted to talk to?” This layered conversation is what turns simple answers into truly actionable feedback.

If you don’t ask follow-up questions, you often end up with ambiguous or incomplete responses—like “Yes, I was bullied,” without knowing how, when, or what support was needed. Now, researchers know that around one-third of elementary school children are involved in bullying in some way [1], but unless we dig deeper, we won’t understand how to help them. Automated follow-ups save researchers dozens of hours while capturing details that make a difference—the data is instantly richer and, frankly, more human. Try generating a bullying survey with AI and see how the experience feels much closer to a real interview than a boring checklist.

No more copy-pasting data: let AI analyze your survey about bullying instantly.

  • AI-powered survey analysis in Specific summarizes responses automatically—no more manual data entry, coding, or spreadsheets.

  • Instantly see key themes, trends, and actionable insights from your bullying survey responses in one place.

  • With AI-powered bullying survey analysis, you can chat directly with AI about your results—ask, “What situations make students feel most unsafe?” and get expert-level insights immediately.

  • This automated survey feedback approach helps you move from raw data to actual improvements fast—perfect for busy professionals and researchers working in education and bullying prevention.

Analyzing survey responses with AI is a gamechanger, letting you focus on solutions, not number crunching.

Create your survey about bullying now

Tackle bullying feedback with smarter, faster conversational surveys. Experience expert survey creation, instant follow-ups, and actionable AI insights—start in seconds with best-in-class tools from Specific.

Try it out

Sources

  1. BMC Public Health. Bullying involvement among children in elementary schools

  2. Stanford University. School bullying affects majority of elementary students

  3. Statista. Number of bullying cases in Japanese elementary schools in 2022

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.