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Preparing
A Resume
by Brea Barthel and Amanda Goldrick-Jones of the Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute
A
resume is a brief summary of your abilities, education, experience,
and skills. Its main task is to convince prospective employers
to contact you.
A resume has one purpose: to get you a job interview.
Resumes must do their work quickly. Employers or personnel
officers may look through hundreds of applications and may
spend only a few seconds reviewing your resume. To get someone
to look at it longer, your resume must quickly convey that
you are capable and competent enough to be worth interviewing.
The more thoroughly you prepare your resume now, the more
likely someone is to read it later.
OVERVIEW: How to prepare your resume
Contents:
1. Gather and check all necessary information
2. Match your experience and skills with an
employer's needs
3. Highlight details that demonstrate your
capabilities
4. Organize the resume effectively
5. Consider word choice carefully
6. Ask other people to comment on your resume
7. Make the final product presentable
8. Evaluate your resume
1. Gather and check all necessary information:
Write down headings such as EDUCATION, EXPERIENCE,
HONORS, SKILLS, ACTIVITIES. Beneath each heading, jot
down the following information:
EDUCATION usually means post-secondary and can
include special seminars, summer school, or night school
as well as college and university. If you are just starting
college, you can include high school as well. List degrees
and month/year obtained or expected; names and locations
of schools; major and minor, if any; grade point average.
A brief summary of important courses you've taken might
also be helpful.
EXPERIENCE includes full-time paid jobs, academic
research projects, internships or co-op positions, part-time
jobs, or volunteer work. List the month/years you worked,
position, name and location of employer or place, and responsibilities
you had. As you describe your experiences, ask yourself
questions like these:
- Have I invented, discovered, coordinated, organized,
or directed anything professionally or for my community?
- Do I meet deadlines consistently?
- Am I a good communicator?
- Do I enjoy teamwork?
Even if you're new to a field, you aren't necessarily starting
from scratch.
HONORS
List any academic awards (scholarships, fellowships, honors
list), professional awards or recognition, or community
awards (i.e. for athletic skills).
SKILLS
List computer languages and software, research, laboratory,
teaching or tutoring, communication, leadership, or athletic,
among others.
ACTIVITIES
List academic, professional, or community organizations
in which you hold office or are currently a member; list
professional and community activities, including volunteer
work. Listing extra-curricular activities or hobbies is
optional.
After you have all this information down, check it for
accuracy. You'll need full names, in some cases full addresses,
correct and consistent dates, and correct spellings.
2. Match your skills and experience with
an employer's needs:
POSITION:
What kind of position do you want for this job-search? Make
notes. Now match your wishes up with positions that are
actually available. You can get this information through
postings, ads, personal contacts, or your own research.
EMPLOYER:
For a certain position, what aspects of your education,
experience, or skills will be most attractive to that employer?
List SPECIFIC coursework, areas of specialty, specific
skills, or knowledge that you think would interest the employer.
3. Highlight Details That Demonstrate
Your Capabilities
Look over what you've written and try to select
details of your education, experience, honors, skills, and
activities that match an employer's needs in a few important
areas.
4. Organize the Resume Effectively
PERSONAL INFORMATION
Top center of first page. Name (no title); addresses;
phone numbers; e-mail and/or fax addresses (optional); citizenship
if applicable.
NOTE: A potential employer has no legal right to request
information about age, sex, race, religion, marital status,
health, physical appearance, or personal habits. Don't include
such information on your resume.
EDUCATION
Often comes first in student resumes, especially if it is
a strong asset.
EXPERIENCE
Here, you can use one of two formats:
Functional: To emphasize skills and talents, cluster
your experience under headings that highlight these skills.
Example: leadership, research, computers, etc. This format
can be helpful if you have little relevant job experience.
Chronological: To emphasize work experience, list
jobs beginning with the most recent. Some hints:
- Write all job descriptions in parallel phrases, using
ACTION verbs
- List the most important responsibilities or successes
first
- List similar tasks together
- Emphasize collaborative or group-related tasks
AWARDS/HONORS
Use reverse chronological order; include titles, places,
dates.
ACTIVITIES
Generally, list hobbies, travel, or languages only if they
relate to your job interests. In some cases, you may wish
to emphasize your willingness to travel or relocate.
REFERENCES
You need not put these on your resume. Instead, you can
prepare a separate list of references, with complete name,
title, company name, address, and telephone numbers for
each individual. Usually, you give this list to prospective
employers after your interview.
CREATING YOUR DRAFT:
Look at other resumes written for positions within
your field.
TYPE each entry in a format close to the one
you want to use for your resume.
LENGTH: for many resumes, two pages is the maximum
length (NOTE: an academic resume or "curriculum vita"
is often at least five pages long). <
5. Consider Word Choice Carefully
In a resume, you need to sound positive and confident:
neither too aggressive, nor overly modest. The following
words and phrases are intended as suggestions for thinking
about your experience and abilities.
Whatever your final word choices are, they should accurately
describe you -- your skills, talents, and experience.
Choose ACTIVE VERBS that describe your skills, abilities,
and accomplishments. Examples: I can contribute, enjoy creating,
have experience in organizing. . . While at X Company, I
administered, coordinated, directed, participated in....
Here is a list of such verbs: accomplish; achieve; analyze;
adapt; balance; collaborate; coordinate; communicate; compile;
conduct; contribute; complete; create; delegate direct;
establish; expand; improve; implement; invent; increase;
initiate; instruct; lead; organize; participate; perform;
present; propose; reorganize; research; set up; supervise;
support; train; travel; work (effectively, with others)
NOTE: You can change the forms of any of these
verbs to stress different aspects of your abilities and
experience: organize ==> organized, organizing, organization.
Choose ADJECTIVES and NOUNS that describe yourself positively
and accurately:
able to; administrative; analytical; (fluently) bilingual;
broad scope; capable; communication skills; collaboration;
collaborative; consistent; competent; complete; creative;
dedicated; diversified; effective; experienced; efficient;
extensive; exceptional; flexible; global; handle stress;
imaginative; intensive; in-depth; innovative; integrated;
able to listen; motivated; multilingual; multidisciplinary;
a negotiator; other cultures; reliable; responsible; a supervisor;
teamwork; well- traveled; work well with....
6. Ask Other People to Comment on Your Resume
WE STRONGLY RECOMMEND that you have an advisor, potential
employer, or someone in your field critique your resume.
NOTE: People may offer many different opinions. Use your
own judgment and be open-minded about constructive criticism.
7. Make the Final Product Presentable
Use a computer and high-quality (preferably laser) printer.
If you don't have a computer or laser printer, you should
either have your resume professionally produced, or use
the resources that a local printer (or copy shop) has to
offer.
8. Evaluate Your Resume
Hold your resume at arm's length and see how it looks.
Is the page too busy with different type styles, sizes,
lines, or boxes? Is the information spaced well, not crowded
on the page? Is there too much "white space"?
Is important information quick and easy to find?
CONTENT
- Name is at the top of the page: highlighted by slightly
larger type size, bolding, and/or underlining
- Address and phone number(s) are complete and correct,
with zip and area codes, and are well-placed in relation
to name
- All entries highlight a capability or accomplishment
- Descriptions use active verbs, and verb tense is consistent;
current job is in present tense; past jobs are in past tense
- Repetition of words or phrases is kept to a minimum
- Capitalization, punctuation, and date formats are consistent
- There are NO typos or spelling errors
ORGANIZATION
- Your best assets, whether education, experience, or skills,
are listed first
- The page can be easily reviewed: categories are clear,
text is indented
- The dates of employment are easy to find and consistently
formatted
- Your name is printed at the top of each page
FORMAT/DESIGN
No more than two typestyles appear; typestyles used are
conservative
- Holding, italics, and capitalization are used minimally
and consistently
- Margins and line spacing keep the page from looking too
crowded
- Printing is on one side of the sheet only, on high-quality
bond--white or off-white (i.e. beige or ivory)
- The reproduction is good, with no blurring, stray marks,
or faint letters
- The right side of the page is in "ragged"
format, not right-justified. Right justification creates
awkward white spaces
Now you're done! Just one more suggestion: If you are sending
your resume to a prospective employer, you'll probably also
have to include a separate cover letter. This is
usually one page long. The letter indicates your interest
in a particular company or position, summarizes the most important
aspects of your education and experience, and lets the employer
know where and when you can be contacted for an interview.
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