Results tagged “College students” from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters Tips Blog

College students sometimes feel funny listing a degree on their resumes when they haven’t graduated yet. But if you list your degree with your graduation date, and the date is in the future, the employer will understand that you don’t yet have the degree. For example:

Bachelor of Science in Psychology, Rollins College, Winter Park, FL, May 2011.

However, you may feel more comfortable adding the word “expected” to the above:

Bachelor of Science in Psychology, Rollins College, Winter Park, FL, expected May 2011.

Read more in our Frequently Asked Resume Questions: A FAQ for College Students and New Graduates.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

College students often question whether they should list college coursework on their resumes.

  • Probably not unless it contributes something different from what any other student in your major would offer an employer.
  • You can also list coursework if you have very little else to include on your resume and need some padding.
  • Note: It is better to list major course projects you completed rather than names of the classes themselves.
  • Similarly, don’t list course numbers; they will mean nothing to readers outside your university.

Read more in our Frequently Asked Resume Questions: A FAQ for College Students and New Graduates.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

College students, be sure to include class and team projects on your resume. You have probably participated in many projects during your college years that have real-world applications and that have helped you polish your transferable skills. If you have lots of relevant internship and job experience, you may have less need to detail class projects on your resume.

But if your experience is sparse, class projects are a perfectly legitimate way to beef up your resume. In one of our favorite examples of a student resume that makes the most of class projects, the student is quite upfront about the fact that these are class projects; yet she portrays them with the same weight and seriousness as she portrays her internship experience.

You could also consider detailing your class projects on a supplement to your resume.

Read our article, Emphasizing Your Classroom Transferable and Marketable Skills for more ideas on how skills honed in the classroom apply to the real world.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

A Quick Guide to Resume Lengths

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Among the resume “rules” you may have heard is the one in which resumes should be limited to one page. While it’s true that most entry-level job-seekers should try to limit their resumes to a single page, this length is rarely appropriate for those at senior and executive levels. Top-level job-seekers will find it virtually impossible to capture the breadth of their experience and accomplishments in a single page, and some employers expect longer resumes from those candidates, sometimes up to five pages. In a 2007 survey by Accountemps, a specialized staffing service, only 7 percent of senior executives from human resources, finance and marketing departments favored one-page resumes for executives, while 61 percent favored two pages. Respondents were receptive to three-page resumes for executive roles, with nearly a third (31 percent) citing this as the ideal length.

One-page resumes can be useful for candidates in certain situations, such as networking, in which the job-seeker wants to give potential network contacts a thumbnail glance at his or her career.

A summary of guidelines on resume length:

  • One page is usually preferred for college students and new grads, but those with rich campus backgrounds and work/internship experience may need two pages.
  • Two-page resumes are suitable for many job-seekers.
  • Three or more pages may be required at the senior level.
  • Job-seekers should never sacrifice readability (tiny type, narrow margins) just to squeeze a resume into a certain number of pages.
  • When a resume spills onto an additional page, it should fill up at least half of that page. If not, try to condense.

See our article, The Scoop on Resume Length: How Many Pages Should Your Resume Be? for a variety of opinions and guidelines on resume length.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

College students, list sports on your resume if you are a student-athlete. You can exploit many transferable skills (teamwork, leadership, competitive drive) with sports. Many on-campus recruiters specifically ask to interview athletes. Consider even listing sports in your Experience section. Read more in our Frequently Asked Resume Questions: A FAQ for College Students and New Graduates.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

College students with minimal experience to list on resumes and cover letters can brainstorm using our College Experience Worksheet for Resume Development.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

Here are ways to consider sharpening the focus of your resume:

  • Use a branding statement or headline or both atop your resume.
  • Add a profile/qualifications summary with keywords relevant to the job you seek.
  • Add a keyword section relevant to the job you seek.
  • Beef up portrayal of accomplishments and transferable skills. Be sure to spotlight skills that apply to what you want to do next.
  • Use our Cover Letter and Resume Customization Worksheet to help you sharpen your focus.
  • For college students and new grads: Consider adding class projects in your major (or other classes) that are applicable to what you want to do upon graduation.

Riskier options for sharpening your focus:

  • Consider a chrono-functional format. Organize your resume around skills clusters that directly apply to the job you seek.
  • Use an objective statement.

Read more in our Frequently Asked Questions About Resumes: The Complete Resume FAQ.


Need help with your resume, cover letter, or other career-marketing document? Order today from Quintessential Resumes and Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.

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The Quintessential Resumes & Cover Letters Tips Blog provides daily suggestions for making your resume, cover letter, and other career-marketing communications as effective as they can be. Need professional help with your job-search materials? Visit Quintessential Resumes & Cover Letters, powered by About Jobs Resume Writing Service.
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