Basic student resume templates are the type of resume that most employers will use. But why should they use a template when there are so many other sources to use?
Over countless times, I have been asked if I was joking about that statement. The truth is that they actually were my reasons for creating basic student resume templates.
Most people, at some point in their career, have heard a corporate recruiter call or visit them and ask them if they would consider a job. They are not even sure how long it took before they started listing their name down. This is because they did not list their full name.
Then, another person asked what their name was and they listed their name for about five seconds. Then, they listed their title and position again, then their position title and finally their title again.
If you were hired, your resume might look like this:
Or this:
Someone from Google might come to that person's profile and find an advertisement or two, and when a person finds their own resume posting somewhere, they might find it very irritating. A person might get a little defensive and begin to list their own resume instead of listing what they do. For example, a young woman might write her own resume and put herself first instead of listing the duties she performs.
When a young man or woman who works part time with the same company as a group of men or women, and the person's name is Joe, they might have it in their head that they are a group of businessmen and feel self_conscious about their gender. It may be the same men and women who are working with Joe all the time and in the way the text flows off of each other and they are starting to think that they are all part of the same company.
Then, when Joe puts a full_time position, they put a part_time position, and when he is listed as a bartender, they put him as a waiter. You see the dynamics of the changing text flowing from one job to the next.
This happens over again with employees, it is called "job" jockeying. When an employee leaves a job, they start listing all of the jobs they are doing, listing them down as they leave them, and listing them down as they go into each new job. Over time, the beginning of a person's resume gets longer, sometimes even ending up overlapping into a person's resume.
Another thing is when a person goes on to college and starts a new career, they usually list the new career they are in first, while adding in the job they used to hold. They keep going on for several pages about their new career. Then, when they leave that career and move onto the next one, the same thing happens.
There are three basic things that happen when a person is trying to fill out a resume. First, they give their full name and then they begin to list the job they were doing before they changed careers. Second, they list the job they were in before they took a different job.
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