👩‍🏫 Education

Anonymous Teacher Evaluation Form

Six questions students complete at end-of-semester. Get the honest evaluation that named LMS surveys never produce — because students know nothing they write here can affect their grade.

Free forever · 3 forms · unlimited responses · no credit card

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This is what respondents see

Teacher Evaluation

Anonymous evaluation of your teacher. Truly anonymous — the school sees aggregated themes only, and they don't see grades alongside responses.

PoorExcellent
PoorExcellent
PoorExcellent
Definitely
Maybe
Probably not
Respondent's anonymous text answer appears here…
Respondent's anonymous text answer appears here…
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You'll get an editable copy in your dashboard. Edit any question, then share the link.

When to use this template

End-of-semester teacher evaluations are a standard practice in higher education and increasingly in K–12. The problem: most evaluations are run through LMS systems (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle) that tie responses to student accounts, even when "anonymous mode" is enabled. Students know this and respond accordingly.

Use this template:

  • End of each semester for every course
  • Mid-semester as a corrective check (rare but valuable)
  • End of each module for self-paced courses
  • For substitute teachers to give them rapid feedback for improvement
  • For coaching and mentoring contexts — peer feedback for educators in training

Send via a class announcement, email, or LMS broadcast — but keep the form itself outside the LMS so the anonymity is structurally real, not just policy-promised.

Why teacher evaluations require structural anonymity

Three things make teacher evaluations the highest-risk feedback flow in education:

  1. Grade leverage — the teacher controls the student's grade, often retroactively. Students fear (rightly, sometimes) that critical feedback can affect grading.
  2. Institutional politics — students who criticize popular teachers worry about academic standing or future recommendations.
  3. Power asymmetry — students rarely have institutional power; teachers usually do. Speaking truth across that asymmetry requires real protection.

LMS-integrated evaluations promise anonymity but typically retain identification at the admin level. Sophisticated students know this. Less sophisticated students find out from older students. Either way, the trust is broken.

Anonymeter's design eliminates the risk at the technical layer. No IP. No cookie. No login. No respondent identity column in the database. Even with a court order, identity cannot be revealed because it was never stored. Students who know this answer truthfully — and that produces evaluations that actually improve teaching.

The 6 questions, explained

Three ratings anchor the core teaching dimensions:

  1. Explaining material — the most fundamental teaching skill
  2. Responsiveness to questions — separates lecturers from teachers; predicts whether struggling students get help
  3. Grading fairness and clarity — captures the dimension students most often suffer from silently

One multiple-choice retention proxy"Would you take another class with this teacher?" — the strongest single signal. Captures "I learned something" + "I'd commit time to learn from this person again."

Two open-text complete the picture:

  • What teacher does well — captures strengths to amplify
  • What teacher could improve — actionable critical feedback

6 questions takes ~5 minutes; right for end-of-semester focus.

Best practices

  • Run after grades are submitted, ideally after final grades are released — removes the perceived risk of retaliation
  • Send the link via institutional email, not LMS — students trust external forms more than LMS-embedded ones
  • Make participation optional but visible — "your feedback shapes course offerings next semester"
  • Aim for 60%+ response rate — easy for courses where students care; harder for required intro courses
  • Don't ask "what was your grade?" or "how often did you attend?" — those identify students
  • Set retention to 365 days, then auto-delete — GDPR-friendly, signals seriousness about anonymity
  • Share themed results with the teacher privately; never make individual evaluations public

What to do with the responses

A working flow:

  1. Department chair or program director reads responses — not the teacher directly
  2. Within 2 weeks of close, write a themed summary: 2–3 strengths, 1–2 improvement areas
  3. 1:1 between department chair and teacher to review the summary
  4. Teacher picks 1–2 specific commitments based on the feedback
  5. Compare across semesters — if the same theme recurs across 3+ semesters, structural intervention needed
  6. Use Anonymous Follow-Up sparingly — Anonymeter lets you ask clarifying questions ("can you give an example?") without identifying the student. Use only when a theme needs detail to act on.

Why Anonymeter for teacher evaluations

The end-of-semester evaluation industry (Smart Evals, EvaluationKit, Watermark Student Learning & Licensure) charges institutions $2–$8 per student per year, with annual contracts and complex setup. Worth it for large institutions that need full LMS integration; massive overspend for smaller programs that just want honest feedback.

Anonymeter is $0 for unlimited responses. The structural anonymity is what makes the data honest — and that's the only thing that makes the evaluation worth running.

For individual teachers running their own evaluations (without institutional bureaucracy), $0 with no setup gets you better data than the institutional system would.

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Frequently asked

How is this different from classroom feedback?
Classroom feedback is per-class, focused on a single lesson, frequent (weekly or per-class). Teacher evaluation is end-of-semester, comprehensive, about the teacher overall. Use both.
Should students fill this for every teacher they have?
Yes if they have time. The evaluation is per-teacher, not per-student. Run one form per teacher; students fill multiple forms if they had multiple teachers.
Can the teacher see who wrote what?
No. Anonymeter stores no respondent identity. The teacher sees themes only, summarized by a department chair or program director.
What if the responses are unfair or vindictive?
Some always will be. The signal is in the patterns across 10+ responses, not in any individual response. Single outliers can be ignored; recurring themes from many students are signal.
How long should the form take to fill?
5–7 minutes. The 3 ratings + 1 choice take under 2 minutes; the 2 text responses are where most time goes.
Is this really free?
Yes. 3 forms, unlimited responses, forever, no credit card. Pro at \$9/month adds CSV export and Anonymous Follow-Up.

Run your anonymous teacher evaluation form in 5 minutes

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