RESUME
THE ANATOMY OF A RESUME
Your resume will create the first impression of YOU. Consider the
appearance, style and content. This sheet of information will convey your
qualifications, experience, and interests. If at all possible, it is
recommended to keep your resume to one page. It must be free of typos and
check the grammar.
NAME
For personal identification purposes. It
must clearly state your complete name. Be consistent with the name which will
appear on other documents, e.g. certificates, and high school/college
transcripts. Suggestion is to use upper case letters and bold.
CAMPUS or PERMANENT ADDRESS
Include both
addresses if necessary. When using a campus address indicate date when
you may be reached at home (e.g., "After May xx, 199x"). Remember to
include your zip code, apartment number or other identifying address
marks. It is not recommended to make this section in upper case
letters or bold.
PHONE NUMBER and EMAIL ADDRESS
Telephone
number should include area code. Some individuals like to include their
pager number or their e-mail address, this is optional.
OBJECTIVE
This is the heart of the resume.
If it doesn't beat, your resume can't live. Be proactive what you can
you for the company not what you want the company to do for you. It is
best to use only one objective. Do not let it be confused with your
long-range goals.
EDUCATION
Limit to college. Include the name
and location of college attended, the degree earned, and the date earned.
GPA is optional, but should be indicated if above average usually.
Indicate minors or academic concentrations in addition to the major field.
For a new graduate, if you earned a sizable percentage of your expenses
through part-time/summer employments, the employer would like to
know.
SKILLS
Define your skills and abilities. This
is the area that will make you marketable for those involved with
technology type skills.
RELATED EXPERIENCE
This could be your
co-op/intern experience, clinicals, student teaching experience, etc.,
anything that you have had in the area that you are pursuing.
WORK EXPERIENCE
This is the resume's
bloodstream. Include the job title, name of the company and location, and
dates. Briefly describe responsibilities in an active manner. This
section could include the co-op or internship experience rather than in
the Related Experience section.
HONORS AND ACTIVITIES
Optional. This
identifies a well-rounded individual. Awards, leadership, volunteer
activities and supervisory responsiblities are of particular interest.
This can be divided into two sections; one section for the honors and one
section for activities
INTEREST
Optional. Great to use if you have
extra white space to fill. Include hobbies and vocational pursuits; reveal
your athletic side, etcetera. Many interviews begin with employers
inquiring about your interests.
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
Optional. Community
activities and organizations can demonstrate your ability to work with
others and share your talents. This could be included in the Honors
and Activites section, saves on extra usage of lines.
LANGUAGES
Optional. Are you fluent in another
language besides English? This could be indicated somewhere on your
resume.
MEMBERSHIPS AND COLLEGE ACTIVITIES
Optional.
Indicate your current professional affiliations, sorority, fraternity and
other organizations.
CERTIFICATION
Some trade schools will issue a
certificate rather than a degree. The certificate could be included
in the education section or training section.
REFERENCES
Best to simply indicate "Furnished
upon request" or "Available upon request". Have a reference sheet of
names and information available if requested. Setup the reference
sheet the same format as the resume; name, address, phone
number(s).
A FEW RESUME DO's
Use high quality paper.
White bond, off white, light grey or beige. Avoid distastful, bright or
ugly colors and low quality paper.
Standard paper size is 8 1/2 x 11 inches.
Typing should be PERFECT. No grammar or typo errors.
Be consistent with your layout and composition. Be sure that headings,
columns, spacing and capitalization are consistent.
Use past tense for previous activites, and experiences. Present tense
refers to on-going or current activities.
Bullet marks or dots are effective in drawing the employer's attention to
competencies, accomplishments, or achievements.
Use ample margins and make sure they are uniform. Use indentations and
tabulations for best use of space and emphasis of key points. White space
is used for eye appeal for easy reading.
Font size is very important. Recommendation is no less than 10 point or no
larger than 12. Employers like to see the same size font through the
entire resume and use the bold, underline or bullets to emphasis
certain words, sections or phrases.
Proof read your resume. For the final copy, have several people read your
resume for both content and grammar/spelling.
LAST but not LEAST -- constantly update your resume. Never send an old
resume to which you could or should add recent information.
A FEW DON'Ts
Federal and state governments
have issued guidelines prohibiting employers from asking for certain
information, e.g. race, sex, age, ethnic background. This information can
be discriminatory.
Don't use italics or scripts.
Don't include photographs.
Don't use ditto copies, carbons, or photo reproduction copies.
Don't forget to record your name and page 2 on the second page.
Don't use personal pronouns.
Don't exaggerate. Avoid the fruity-tootie and flowery words.
Don't use abbreviations. Try to always spell the word completely.
Don't use poor quality paper.
SAMPLE RESUME for Full-time Position