As you progress in your college career, you may want to consider putting together a curriculum vitae or an extended resume. CVs look really good for graduate or any other professional schooling as well as grant and scholarship applications. Job interviews, unless they are for a teaching position, lawyer position, doctor position, or other major professions, do not require CVs (do not hand a CV to the person interviewing you for a sales associate position, they will look very confused…this happened quite often to me). I will provide tips and a look at my CV as well:
Tips to Consider:
- Keep the format consistent- Everything that needs to be capitalized, should remain capitalized, font is the same, margins are the same, etc
- Font should be a certain, size 11-12 point
- Arial or Times Roman Numeral are the only acceptable fonts
- Order your CV in sections that are the most important and most relevance
- Keep dates in mind (start with most recent and end in oldest date)
- This is an extended resume so have items on the CV within the last 3-5 years.
- Have a VERY STRONG front page!
- Go to your career center in college to have them look over it. They are super helpful!
- Update this CV constantly!
Here we go onto my CV. My CV has 0.5 inch margins all around. Let’s start with the top that I blocked out my personal stuff for obvious reasons:
My name is in 16 point font and I used Times Roman Numeral. Below my name, I put my address, phone number, and email in 11 point font. I also put a space in between name and address to put my number and email address. I added a shape to divide the CV.
Next will be my most important attributes to my CV. Since I use my CV mainly for grant applications and graduate school admissions, I put education and research first: