My name is Rosie Ceja and I am a Sophomore Nursing  major. I have been working at the Career Services Center as a student  assistant for the past 3 semesters. Towards the end of last semester I  was presented with the opportunity to become a Career Planning Peer  (CPP) and I am super excited to be in training this semester for this  awesome position!!
As part of my training process I have been shadowing  a few drop ins and counseling appointments. The most common reason for  drop ins is to have a resume looked over and reviewed. In the sessions I  have shadowed, I have noticed a few reoccurring topics when it comes to  resumes that I would like to address in hopes of making the resume  writing process a little easier. 
One of the most important (if not THE most  important) components of a resume are the accomplishment statements.  These are meant to be a detailed explanation of what you accomplished  for the company or how you made a difference in your position. There are  a few things to remember about writing a strong accomplishment  statement. You may want to keep the S-T-A-R format in mind:
S - Situation: define the general context
T - Task: identify the key objective
A - Action: describe the action you took or initiated and emphasize the skills you incorporated.
R - Result: Summarize the outcome; QUANTIFY as much, and whenever possible. 
-  With every accomplishment statement you should start with an ACTION  VERB and avoid starting with "responsible for" or "duties included"'
- Recall and incorporate specific and unique examples
- Write your accomplishments as concise bullet points (not paragraphs)
- You should write about 2-3 statements per position
- Quantify whenever possible and use numerical digits
Once you have your accomplishments set, the rest  should be easy! Focus on format and consistency with every aspect of  your resume. 
Hope these tips helped and good luck to you all this semester!
Rosie
No comments:
Post a Comment