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My Favorite Things Questionnaire Form

Skip the surface-level icebreakers. Ask what someone loves, fears, and hopes for most, and really get to know them.

My Favorite Things Questionnaire Form

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Classroom icebreakers and team introductions that stick to names and roles miss what actually makes people interesting to know. Favorite things reveal personality, spark conversations, and create connections that professional bios and intake forms never surface. Typeform's My Favorite Things Questionnaire template gives teachers and team leaders an organized way to collect personal favorites from anyone.

The questionnaire covers favorite movies, foods, places, games, people, biggest fears, and greatest hopes in a single, focused submission. With Typeform, respondents move through one question at a time, so each prompt gets a considered answer. Conditional logic digs deeper when a response is worth exploring further. A student who names a personal hero sees a follow-up asking what that person taught them, adding depth to every response.

Customize the question set for your classroom, friend group, team, or family with your own categories and follow-ups. Post it on your classroom platform, share via link with friends, or send it ahead of any group gathering. Every response logs in Google Sheets or Airtable via Zapier, so you can spot shared favorites across the whole group. Get past the small talk and into the conversations that actually matter.

My Favorite Things Questionnaire Form FAQs:

A My Favorite Things Questionnaire form is a structured digital questionnaire that collects personal favorites, preferences, and reflections from respondents in a fun, low-pressure format. It asks about favorite movies, foods, places, people, games, biggest fears, and greatest hopes, building a snapshot of personality and values from simple, honest answers. It functions as both an icebreaker tool and a personal reflection exercise, helping people articulate what they love and learn the same about others.

A favorite things questionnaire tells you what someone values, what brings them joy, and what they're afraid of losing. For teachers, it turns a standard first-day activity into a genuine opportunity to understand students before the curriculum begins. For teams, families, and friend groups, it surfaces common ground that small talk never reaches. Use it for classroom icebreakers, team onboarding, family reunion activities, summer camp introductions, and friend group bonding.

A few questions a My Favorite Things Questionnaire might include:

  • Favorite movie, TV show, or book
  • Favorite food and go-to comfort meal
  • Favorite place you've been or dream destination
  • Person you admire most and why
  • Favorite game, sport, or hobby
  • Biggest fear
  • Greatest hope or personal goal
  • One thing most people don't know about you

After responses come in, look for overlapping answers between participants — two people who listed the same film or share an unusual fear have an instant conversation starter you can act on. For classroom settings, group students with matching interests for an activity or call out shared favorites to spark a group discussion. For teams, share a summary of collective favorites at the next meeting to break the ice without putting anyone on the spot.

Duplicate the form and adjust the question language for each context you use it in. A version for younger students uses simple, direct language ("What's your favorite animal?"), while a professional team version can go deeper ("What's one thing you're proud of that never comes up at work?"). A family version can include prompts about shared memories and traditions. Each version maintains the same warm, open-ended spirit, but the specific questions make the experience feel made for the people in the room.

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