The relationship between investigative interviewing experience and open-ended question usage
Date
2014
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Police Practice and Research
Abstract
We present three studies examining the role of prior job experience in interviewing and interviewers' ability to learn open-ended questions during a training program. We predicted a negative relationship such that more experienced interviewers would perform worse after training than less experienced interviewers, and that (irrespective of baseline performance) the more experienced interviewers would improve the least during training. These predictions were made for two reasons. First, specific questions are commonly used in the workplace (i.e. open-ended questioning constitutes new learning). Second, experience in the use of specific questions potentially interferes with newly learned open-ended questions. Overall, our predictions were supported across different participant samples (including police officers specialized in child abuse investigation and social workers from the child protection area), time delays, and modes of training. The results highlight the need for investment in ongoing investigative interviewing training commencing early during professionals' careers, prior to the establishment of long-term habits in the use of specific questions. (Author Abstract)
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Keywords
child abuse, interviewing, effectiveness, assessment, research, International Resources, Australia
Citation
Powell, Martine B. ; Hughes-Scholes, Carolyn H. ; Smith, Rebecca ; Sharman, Stefanie J. (2014). The relationship between investigative interviewing experience and open-ended question usage. Police Practice and Research, 15(4), 283-292.