
The education-sector deployment of the Teach to Talk® methodology and the Adaptive Strategies Compass™. Built for the Title IX, DASA, and conduct investigations where due process and trauma-informed practice both have to hold up.
Evidence-based techniques for conducting fair, thorough, and defensible investigations within educational settings.
Fair Process·Impartial Investigation·Trauma-Informed Practice·Defensible Documentation
Investigative interviewing in education touches more roles than the title implies. The course is built for the full range of professionals who conduct these conversations, full-time investigators and dual-role administrators alike, across K–12 and higher education.
The role most directly accountable for the integrity of the investigation. The course provides the interview methodology that holds up under OCR review, appeal, and civil litigation.
The professionals who conduct the bulk of conduct, disciplinary, and behavioral investigations in higher education. Same methodology, adapted for the breadth of cases conduct teams actually handle.
The administrators handling DASA, bullying, harassment, and conduct investigations at the K–12 level. The course adapts every technique for age-appropriate interviewing and the specific evidentiary realities of K–12 records.
The investigators handling Title IX matters in athletic departments, where peer dynamics, coach involvement, and institutional pressure converge. Calibrated technique for the cases that draw the most external scrutiny.
District-level and university HR professionals investigating employee misconduct, harassment, and policy violations. The same investigative discipline applied to education-sector personnel cases.
Deans, vice principals, and senior staff who handle investigations as part of a broader role. The course is built to give part-time investigators the same structural methodology as full-time professionals.
Available in one- or two-day formats, this course teaches education professionals how to conduct investigations that meet Title IX, DASA, and general conduct investigation standards, while treating all parties with fairness and dignity. The course emphasizes trauma-informed approaches, impartiality, and documentation.
They fail in the interview itself, where the seven failure modes below contaminate the record before anyone has a chance to evaluate it.
Investigative Interviewing in Education teaches investigators how to avoid those failures through a structured, evidence-based framework rooted in investigative interviewing science, behavioral observation, trauma-informed practice, and documentation standards aligned to Title IX, DASA, and conduct investigation requirements.
The objective is not to confirm what the administration already suspects. The objective is a fair, complete, defensible record.
The methodology this course delivers is organized around the Adaptive Strategies Compass™, an eight-direction investigative framework calibrated for education-sector investigations. Each direction maps to a specific moment in the interview process where Title IX, DASA, and conduct investigators routinely lose impartiality, accuracy, or defensibility.
Fair, evidence-based, non-coercive dialogue that produces accurate disclosure across complainants, respondents, and witnesses. The conversational discipline that protects due process for every party at the table.
A six-stage investigative thinking framework (Assess, Collect, Collate, Evaluate, Survey, Summarize) applied to the full arc of a Title IX or conduct investigation from intake notice through final determination.
Reading communication style across students, faculty, staff, and parents. The same incident described by different communication styles produces different statements. Knowing this protects the integrity of the record and the impartiality of the finding.
The most research-validated technique for improving recall accuracy, applied to complainant and witness interviews where the incident may have occurred weeks, months, or longer before the conversation. Context reinstatement and varied retrieval surface details that standard administrative interviewing routinely misses.
Pre-interview planning that anticipates the sequencing of complainant, witness, and respondent interviews, where each conversation will branch, and how to navigate when the account develops in real time without contaminating later interviews in the sequence.
Five lenses (Rationalize, Project, Minimize, Socialize, Emphasize the Truth) for understanding why a complainant, respondent, or witness is presenting their account the way they are. Applied with equal rigor to every party at the table.
Sequencing evidence and exhibits so the interview tests consistency without crossing into accusation. The technique that preserves impartiality even when the investigator believes they know what happened.
Challenge-and-clarify questioning that resolves contradictions in testimony fairly. Disciplined intervention that produces clarification rather than confession, and stays inside the procedural limits Title IX and conduct frameworks explicitly require.
Every direction in this Compass deploys in education-sector investigations. Title IX coordinators, deans, conduct administrators, and HR partners leave this course with the complete framework, calibrated for the matters their institutions actually handle.
Explore the Adaptive Strategies Compass™ →
Certified Forensic Interviewer (CFI) · IADLEST National Certified Instructor (INCI) · Certified Polygraph Examiner · Former Senior Investigator, New York State Police
Joseph R. Auriemma, Jr. is a retired Senior Investigator with the New York State Police and former primary interviewing instructor for the New York State Police Academy. Over a 24-year career, he conducted and supervised thousands of interviews involving violent crime, sexual offenses, victim and witness disclosures, and high-stakes subject interactions, the same evidentiary and procedural disciplines that Title IX, DASA, and conduct investigations demand.
Today, Joe applies that investigative methodology to education-sector investigations, helping Title IX coordinators, deans, conduct administrators, and HR partners conduct interviews that are impartial, trauma-informed, and legally defensible.
The Title IX coordinators, deputy coordinators, deans of students, and conduct administrators who consistently produce findings that survive appeal, OCR review, and litigation are not the ones with sharper instincts. They are the ones with a structured interview methodology, an impartial framework applied with equal rigor to every party, and documentation that does not need to be rewritten when the record is challenged.
Contact ASC to bring Investigative Interviewing in Education to your institution and equip your team for the investigations where the quality of the conversation determines the quality of the finding.
Yes. The course is built around current Title IX requirements for investigative interviewing, impartial interviews of complainants, respondents, and witnesses, fair questioning, contamination avoidance, and documentation that withstands review. Curriculum updates reflect the most recent regulatory changes.
Yes. The course addresses DASA-specific investigation requirements alongside Title IX, including age-appropriate techniques for interviewing students, documentation standards, and interventions that protect both student welfare and institutional defensibility.
Title IX coordinators, deputy coordinators, conduct administrators, school-based investigators, HR partners in K–12 and higher education, and senior administrators who oversee investigative outcomes. The course works for both new investigators and experienced staff updating their practice to current standards.
Most compliance training tells administrators what they have to do. This course teaches them how to do it, specifically how to conduct an interview that produces reliable, uncontaminated information while satisfying Title IX, DASA, and conduct investigation standards. The interview is where most institutions are exposed; this course closes that gap.
Yes. A core module covers trauma-informed interviewing for students and staff, including how to recognize trauma responses, create safe interview conditions, and produce credible accounts without re-traumatization. This is essential because complainant interviews in education settings often involve trauma-exposed individuals.
Yes. Impartiality is central to the course. Investigators learn to use the same disciplined methodology, open questions, contamination avoidance, structured documentation, across all interview types, treating complainants, respondents, and witnesses with the same fairness. This is essential for due process and litigation defense.
Investigators learn to produce contemporaneous notes and written summaries that capture interview content accurately, distinguish observation from inference, and create a record that withstands appellate review or litigation discovery. Documentation is treated as part of the interview, not an afterthought.
The course is delivered on-site at your institution in one-day or two-day format. Contact ASC through the Request Training form or by calling (914) 489-2330 to discuss scheduling, audience size, and specific compliance focus (Title IX, DASA, code of conduct, or combinations thereof).
Request information or schedule a strategy call to discuss your organization's needs.