Project: Other Resume Styles
Project: Other Resume Styles | |
|Introduction: |
|Now that you have developed a resume in the one-page classic style preferred by employers, there are several other styles of |
|resumes that you may wish to create to use either now in your job search or in your future career. |
|You may wish to develop an extended resume for networking purposes that gives much more detail about your studies, work |
|experiences, and activities than you would list on an employer resume. |
|Or you may choose to create a functional style or combination of functional and chronological if you have many skill sets that your|
|work or activity experiences do not reflect. |
|You may wish to create a very lengthy curriculum vita type resume for others to use when introducing you as a guest speaker or when|
|selling yourself to a bank loan officer or for some other professional need. |
|Of course, once you have been in the world of work for a period of time, your resume will look quite different from this initial |
|job search resume in that you will list your work experience first and education later. Remember that resumes should be |
|constructed to list your most valuable career asset first. They are a tool to accomplish a desired effect. |
|Instructions: |
|Decide what type resume style you wish to create and then do research to learn how to create that style. Only one resume style |
|will be accepted for credit. |
|Option A: Complete your Extended Networking Style Resume. Read your textbook, Career Planning Strategies: Hire Me! (5th Edition), |
|Chapters 10 & 11, particularly pages 259-60, and look at the longer resume samples in Chapter 12 to gain ideas about creating this |
|resume. |
|Write your resume. Although the employer resume that you created for project 1 may be a good place to begin your networking |
|recommender resume, do not just turn in your Project 1 resume. This new resume must be substantially longer and much more complete|
|and thorough. |
|Consider beginning your networking resume with a skills summary statement. Think about what skills you have to offer and how you |
|want to describe yourself. Be specific. Rather than “good communicator” for example, think about what kind of communication you |
|excel at: public speaking? persuasive communication? relationship building? |
|Be thorough and descriptive when writing all other sections. Use class lecture and the textbook to help you. It is vital that your |
|resume be well organized, articulate, and completely free of typographical, spelling, and grammatical errors. |
|On a separate page describe when and how you intend to use this resume. |
|Option B: Complete your functional or combination style resume. Read your textbook, Career Planning Strategies: Hire Me! (5th |
|Edition), Chapters 10 & 11, particularly pages 262-64, and look at the resume samples in Chapter 12 to gain ideas about creating |
|this resume. |
|Write your resume. This style resume will look completely different from your project 1 resume. |
|Your resume must be well organized, articulate, and completely free of typographical, spelling, and grammatical errors. |
|On a separate page describe when and how you intend to use this resume. |
|Turn In: |
|Resume in option A, or B |
|Descriptive statement |
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