Student Profile Product System ยท Companion Document 01

Student Intake and Interview Workflow

The operating workflow for collecting student context, conducting a guided interview, extracting evidence, and producing a high-fidelity profile.
Document TypeCompanion Guide
Version1.0
DateMay 2026

Purpose

This document defines the intake and interview workflow for the student profile development product. It is designed to create enough structured context to produce a profile that feels specific, recognizable, useful, and grounded in what the student actually says.

Core Rule

The interview must collect evidence before interpretation. The system should not jump directly from a few answers to a polished identity claim.

Workflow Overview

PhasePurposeOutput
Phase 0A: RapportEstablish psychological safety without pretending to be therapy.Student understands the purpose, boundaries, and tone.
Phase 0B: Context CollectionCollect baseline academic, work, activity, and life context.Structured background file.
Phase 1: StandardizationConvert raw answers into normalized signals.Comparable signal map.
Phase 2: QualificationTest strength of signals and separate strong evidence from weak evidence.Evidence-weighted profile inputs.
Phase 3: Difficult QuestionsSurface contradictions, tradeoffs, and blind spots.Nuance layer.
Final Profile GenerationProduce the student-facing profile document.Profile PDF/HTML/aboutme.md package.

Phase 0A: Rapport

The opening phase should reduce defensiveness without becoming overly casual or therapeutic. The goal is to help the student answer honestly and specifically.

  • Explain that this is not a test.
  • Explain that there are no correct answers.
  • Explain that specific examples are more useful than polished answers.
  • Explain that uncertainty is acceptable.
  • Explain that the final profile will distinguish direct evidence from interpretation.
Prompt: This process is designed to help you build a useful profile of how you think, work, communicate, and make decisions. It is not a personality test and it is not therapy. Specific examples are more useful than perfect answers. If you are unsure, say so directly.

Phase 0B: Context Collection

This phase gathers the facts needed to interpret later answers. It should not overreach into sensitive personal history unless the student volunteers information relevant to their goals.

CategoryQuestionsRequired?
EducationMajor, school, graduation year, favorite and least favorite courses.Yes
Work ExperienceJobs, internships, volunteer roles, freelance work.Yes
Leadership and ActivitiesClubs, athletics, projects, organizations, informal responsibilities.Yes
Career DirectionKnown interests, rejected paths, industries under consideration.Yes
ConstraintsLocation, finances, family expectations, visa/work authorization if relevant.Optional and user-controlled
Personal ContextOnly what the student wants included and only if relevant.Optional

Core Interview Question Bank

DomainQuestionSignal Sought
StrengthsWhat do people usually rely on you for?Repeated external validation pattern.
EnergyWhat kind of work makes time pass quickly?Motivational pull.
FrictionWhat kinds of tasks drain you even when you are capable of doing them?Misfit signals.
PressureHow do you behave when a group is confused or stressed?Stress response and team role.
LearningWhat topics do you naturally investigate without being assigned?Intrinsic curiosity.
ValuesWhat makes work feel worth doing?Value drivers.
CommunicationWhen do you feel most misunderstood?Communication gap.
EnvironmentWhat kind of team brings out your best work?Fit conditions.
ContradictionWhat is something about you that people often get wrong?Nuance and correction.

Phase 1: Standardization

Raw answers should be normalized into comparable signals before profile writing begins. This avoids the model over-weighting recent answers or unusually polished statements.

Signal FieldAllowed Values / Format
Signal NameShort label such as Systems Thinking, Empathy, Analytical Discipline.
Evidence TypeDirect statement, repeated pattern, external feedback, behavioral example, inferred pattern.
StrengthStrong, moderate, weak, unknown.
ConfidenceHigh, medium, low.
Supporting Quote or SummaryThe exact answer or concise evidence note.
Risk of OverinterpretationLow, medium, high.

Phase 2: Qualification

Qualification prevents flattering but unsupported profile language. Every major claim should pass a support test.

  1. Does the student directly state this?
  2. Is there behavioral evidence?
  3. Does it appear more than once?
  4. Is there a contradiction?
  5. Would the student recognize this as accurate?
  6. Could this be generic enough to apply to anyone?

Phase 3: Difficult Questions

The difficult-question phase adds the nuance that makes the final profile feel real instead of promotional.

  • Where do you over-function?
  • What do you avoid because you dislike being bad at it?
  • What strength becomes a problem when overused?
  • What environment makes you act unlike yourself?
  • What would your best friend say you are not seeing clearly?
  • What are you good at but do not want to be known for?

Handoff Package

Before final profile generation, the workflow should produce a handoff object containing the structured inputs below.

  • Student context summary
  • Signal map
  • Evidence map
  • Contradiction map
  • Career direction signals
  • Rejected or weakly supported claims
  • Known unknowns
  • Sensitive material exclusion notes
  • Final profile generation instructions

Quality Checklist

  • The final profile uses specific language, not generic praise.
  • Every major claim is supported by evidence or labeled as inference.
  • The profile includes risks and blind spots.
  • The student could use parts of the output in interviews or applications.
  • The document avoids therapy, diagnosis, and destiny language.
  • The final document distinguishes who the student is now from possible future paths.