1 / 14

Texas State University Career Services

Texas State University Career Services. Kim Nelson Career Advisor Liaison to the College of Liberal Arts knelson@txstate.edu 512-245-2645 (main line) www.careerservices.txstate.edu. Poll – What do We know about CV’s?. What the heck is a CV? I’ve heard of it… isn’t it the same as a resume?

gin
Download Presentation

Texas State University Career Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Texas State University Career Services Kim Nelson Career Advisor Liaison to the College of Liberal Arts knelson@txstate.edu 512-245-2645 (main line)www.careerservices.txstate.edu

  2. Poll – What do We know about CV’s? • What the heck is a CV? • I’ve heard of it… isn’t it the same as a resume? • All I know is I need it for my graduate school applications. • I’ve already got mine drafted, but I want to make it the best it can be.

  3. Your Curriculum Vitae Is…

  4. The Curriculum Vitae… • Means “the course of my life” • Sells your professional/academic self • What are your “greatest hits”? • Who and what is the program looking for? • Be strategic and relevant! • Details relevant professional, volunteer, academic, teaching, etc. experience • Is concise, clean and correct • Is different than a resume…

  5. The Curriculum Vitae v. The resume • Resume = professional; CV = academic (graduation school applications, faculty, academic and research positions) • CV is longer and more detailed • Still professional but includes academically focused sections like publications, presentations, teaching experience, etc. • Potential headings include: • ● Education ● Volunteer Work ● Awards & Fellowships • ● Employment ● Certifications ● Teaching Experience • ● Activities ● Leadership ● Research • ● Foreign Languages ● Foreign Travel ● Presentations Note: The difference can get confusing; many foreign countries use the term “CV” to mean “resume.”

  6. Curriculum Vitaes: THe Basics

  7. True or False: The bar for including a GPA on your CV is 3.0.

  8. Three Steps to a Great Experience Section: 1) Focus on accomplishments, not duties.2) Ask yourself: How and why did I accomplish this? With and for whom? How often? What was the effect? 3) Skip vague verbs (help, assist with, plan, etc.)

  9. True or False: In-class presentations are CV-worthy.

  10. True or False: It’s appropriate to include volunteer work at religious, political or other controversial groups on a CV.

  11. True or False: Formatting, organization and presentation don’t matter as much as what the CV says.

  12. 5 steps to curriculum Vitae success • Tailor it to your program • Do your research and identify key proficiencies the program desires • Include your most relevant qualifications • Highlight academic achievement • Highlight achievements, not duties • Pay attention to verbs and incorporate stats • Proofread, proofread, proofread (then have someone else do it) • Grammar, spelling and formatting • Make sure it answers the question: “What experience do I have that sets me apart from my competition?” • Career Services > Resources > Online Publications & Resource Center > Curriculum Vitae & Resume

  13. Thank you! Kim Nelson Career Advisor Liaison to the College of Liberal Arts knelson@txstate.edu 512-245-2645 (main line) www.careerservices.txstate.edu

More Related