Sonntag, 24. Oktober 2010

Resume vs. Curriculum Vitae

A resume is a document of one to two page summary of your career goals, professional experiences performance and educational background. The head of the CV should your name, address and contact information. The body of the RESUME to be divided into the following sections: career goal, profile/summary, professional experience, performance, Applied scholastics and references. Your career objective must be concise, up to two sentences; It has to be your prospective employers an idea of how you wish to move forward in your professional life. A brief profile, or a summary should discuss who you are and how your skills and experience best applies to the task you're interested in. The summary, as well as other parts of your resume, no personal information that reveals ethnicity, sexual orientation, marital status, age, life-threatening situations or other personal information that is not related to your career. Personal profile/summary should only have a few well-written sentences that convey what you can do to the table in terms of the relevant job. Use this section of the employer to attract attention, but don't go overboard in trying to be creative-professional. Your experience offer shall contain information on one to five jobs you have held, starting with your current or last job, and listing of previous positions in chronological order. Your education, college, graduate and post-graduate work, as well as courses or professional certifications that are relevant for the professional advancement of your are. Successes, volunteer positions, publications and interests should only be included if they are on your professional experience that references apply if requested; best practice not to list proposals general statements about references is available upon request as this is understood.




Curriculum vitae or resume is a collection of documents that describe your education and professional history, focusing on your performance and presentation of higher level of detail than a resume. People usually using CV as a form of application are looking for positions in education, entry into graduate and post Graduate programs or research, and they are required to discuss their professional philosophies. While CVS is often restricted to one or two pages, are CV is a compilation of documents, has no length limit and extends over at least a few pages (most often four or five pages, but more can be based on the experience and results). A CV contains similar information such as your resume, but higher emphasis on education and school performance. Unlike your resume, a resume should contain information about scholarships that you have received, texts or research you've completed and published, you grant received, Community and volunteer work, teaching philosophy, and so on. You will start by listing your career goal, in summary form to showcase your commitment to your goals and the actions you are willing to take to achieve them. If you are applying for a teaching position, give a brief outline of your reach philosophy. Immediately after your objectives, a list of your achievements, mark your education first. Here you can enter your thesis project or dissertation, courses that support your career goal, publications and research (in progress or completed), certifications, studies abroad, languages, etc..Your experience should then focus on the work history that supports your career goal. This need to close your resume.


If you are not sure what kind of application are to use, do the proper research and create a resume or CV that corresponds to format generally accepted in your industry.


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