CV
CV
GUYS,
just kick me and plz give me the damn website where I can see HOW TO WRITE MY FREAKIN CV! I am having a really hard time! YES, I'm not a professional person!
i googled it, foogled it and I went to my career center, NOT SATISFIED with those shitty advices! You people must have great idea to write a good CV
I have several awards from my shitty school which I found to be ranked somewhere like 70, I guess in US News! I still think this school is Nowhere school! ( I am not saying this coz I am an international or so). I hate liberal arts, coz I got a C+ in my history class in freshman year. F*** history!
But any ways, the whole point is I would really appreciate it if you guys could forward me any website that provides best resources for getting started with our CV( if u guys already know it)
Thanks.
just kick me and plz give me the damn website where I can see HOW TO WRITE MY FREAKIN CV! I am having a really hard time! YES, I'm not a professional person!
i googled it, foogled it and I went to my career center, NOT SATISFIED with those shitty advices! You people must have great idea to write a good CV
I have several awards from my shitty school which I found to be ranked somewhere like 70, I guess in US News! I still think this school is Nowhere school! ( I am not saying this coz I am an international or so). I hate liberal arts, coz I got a C+ in my history class in freshman year. F*** history!
But any ways, the whole point is I would really appreciate it if you guys could forward me any website that provides best resources for getting started with our CV( if u guys already know it)
Thanks.
I found a link:
http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/g ... ly/cv.html
But I wanted to add to your question: I currently have an up-to-date resume. Is it that important to have a CV as well? Because since I don't really have any publications to explain at this point in my career I think my CV would look exactly like my resume except with complete sentences describing my research/work experience instead of bullet points.
http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/g ... ly/cv.html
But I wanted to add to your question: I currently have an up-to-date resume. Is it that important to have a CV as well? Because since I don't really have any publications to explain at this point in my career I think my CV would look exactly like my resume except with complete sentences describing my research/work experience instead of bullet points.
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every one of your professors likely has a link to their CV on their personal homepage. a CV is not like a personal statement, it is a recounting of sterile, factual data, and so there are no outstanding "techniques" to write a CV that will blow away an admissions committee that doesn't require already having a PRL and a cover story in Nature (joking). Look at the format for a few of your professors' CVs (and understand they've had many more years than you to add items to it), and type away.
yeah that's a good idea, lots of professors have them posted. that's what I did to model mine.
i'm trying to fit mine on one page, so i left out my address to save two lines... i think that's ok since the address is elsewhere on the app... but i hope this breach of formality doesn't tank my whole app
i'm trying to fit mine on one page, so i left out my address to save two lines... i think that's ok since the address is elsewhere on the app... but i hope this breach of formality doesn't tank my whole app
I don't see how they can require it to be one page. Mine takes two pages to include all my research, papers, talks, education, etc. and I couldn't shorten it without omitting important parts. I just used M$'s resume template, and my advisor told me it was fine. Content is more important than format.
@twistor
It's not required to be just one page. If you have that many talks, publications etc... that you need more room, then great.
The reason I was trying to make it one page was not to adhere to some official rule but just to make it easier to deal with. Unfortunately, I don't have many awards or publications to mention, so one page is enough. At my school, there are no merit awards, just need-based and minority scholarships.
It's not required to be just one page. If you have that many talks, publications etc... that you need more room, then great.
The reason I was trying to make it one page was not to adhere to some official rule but just to make it easier to deal with. Unfortunately, I don't have many awards or publications to mention, so one page is enough. At my school, there are no merit awards, just need-based and minority scholarships.
Can we substitute a resume with a CV? I have my CV ready now. I don wanna waste my time with shitty Resume again! Will this matter!
My CV is concise(1 page) and dense( awards, pub,indep work, directed work, summer project, one line for each)
My resume will look the same( 1 page) only format will be different.
I noticed that there is fundamental difference between CV and resume( not just the length).
CV- You have dates on one side and a brief explanation on the other side
Resume- totally different.
My CV is concise(1 page) and dense( awards, pub,indep work, directed work, summer project, one line for each)
My resume will look the same( 1 page) only format will be different.
I noticed that there is fundamental difference between CV and resume( not just the length).
CV- You have dates on one side and a brief explanation on the other side
Resume- totally different.
http://www.searchmastersinternational.c ... me_cv.html
http://www.cvcl.co.uk/resume-writing.htm
In the U.S. (and by extension Canada), employers usually ask for resumes, whereas in Europe, they ask for CVs.
http://www.cvcl.co.uk/resume-writing.htm
In the U.S. (and by extension Canada), employers usually ask for resumes, whereas in Europe, they ask for CVs.
Last edited by vicente on Tue Nov 27, 2007 6:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.