CONSTRUCTING CRITICAL COMPONENTS FOR SUCCESSFUL SEARCH AND SELECTION
Friday, October 2, 2009
Top Ten "DON'T DO ITs" on Your College Application Resume
(in no particular order)
10. "Who's Who Among American High School Students" and other similar "awards" are not considered by colleges/universities to be legitimate.
9. Th does not belong. Simply us (9,10,11,12) to indicate the grade level during which a particular activity was performed. Those th notations can become difficult to read when the admission representative has reviewed 50 other files that same day.
8. There is no need to double up on your academic record. Your official transcript is where the admission office will refer for your course selection and grades earned, not your student resume.
7. Eighth grade does not count. Your resume should be based upon your accomplishments in high school, not what you did in grade school or junior high. Exceptions might be a particular activity that you started in seventh grade and continue to do consistently now.
6. Don't include your school's contact information on your resume. That information is included in other places within your application for admission. Save the space to highlight your own personal achievements.
5. Skip the abbreviations. Opt to spell out National Honor Society (NHS), Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD), and similarly named student organizations.
4. Don't turn your resume into a novel. Remember, this is your resume, not your essay.
3. Inconsistency can make your resume difficult to read. Don't bold one heading and not the next. Don't put a period at the end of one description and not at the end of others.
2. Don't let information get away! Keep a block of text for a particular activity on the same page. This may require moving margins, deleting extra words, etc. You don;t want the reader to forget what the activity was when they have to flip the page to continue reading.
1. Do not submit a first draft of your resume. Take time to edit and revise, just as you do for your essay. Seek advice. Get your resume to a perfect state so that you have it ready to submit with each application for admission and scholarship.
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