EFFECTIVE CURRICULUM VITAE plus Free E-Book


PREPARING A EFFECTIVE CURRICULUM VITAE
The curriculum vitae, commonly referred to as a CV, Vita, or Vitae, is a detailed biographical description of one’s educational and work background (Acy and Kathleen, 2003).  Curriculum vitae is Latin which means “the course of one’s life” and it is seen as a comprehensive statement of your educational background, teaching and research experience, professional and other academic qualifications and activities ( www.career.virginia.edu ). 
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Primary Elements of Curriculum Vitae
Naturally, there are some common experiences that students and professionals in a wide range of occupations share and which should be reflected in a CV (i.e. primary elements of a CV or résumé).
            Good organization and an effective use of section headings guide your audience in assessing your qualifications There is general format for CV writing which contains the primary items or elements of a CV or résumé.  This general format includes:
·         Identification
·         Personal biodata or information
·         Career objective
·         Education
·         Professional qualifications/affiliations
·         Relevant (work) experience
·         Other experience; with reference to where you are applying, your experience in instrumentation, leadership, community development service or volunteer service among others, will be very relevant.
·         Publications, creative works and major achievements
·         Personal competencies and skills indicative of the level of proficiency
·         Hobbies/interests
·         References
           
An expanded version of these elements may include all the following in an academic field whether for research, study, work or scholarship purposes
(Acy and Kathleen, 2003);
• Professional/Career/Vocational/Research Objectives
• Education
• Coursework
• Honors/Achievements/Awards/Kudos
• Thesis/Dissertation Abstract
• Research Interests
• Research and/or Laboratory Experience
• Teaching Interests and Experience
• Instrumentation Experience
• Specialized Skills
• Publications/Presentations/Works-in-Progress
• Work Experience
• Professional Associations/Learned/Scientific Societies
• Background
• Community Service
• Co-curricular Activities
• Interests
• Travel
• References/Letters of Recommendation

            These components are not finite and therefore should be tailored to meet your needs. Adapt them to fit your experiences—use them, in fact, as a basis for creating components that more precisely fit your own situation.
            The specific objective for which you are preparing your CV, as well as the order in which these broad components might appear on your CV, should reflect the degree of importance you attribute to them.  Arrange them so that the most important information appears at the beginning of your CV and the least important at the end.
            Use the following four guidelines as you prepare the initial draft of your curriculum vitae.
1.      Do not feel compelled to complete all the worksheets at one sitting. Begin with those that request routine information and then move on to those that might require reflection and detailed organization.
2.      Initially, focus solely on content. Describe experiences in detail and later refine them through careful revision.
3.      Ignore any overlap among components because some duplications or redundancies will be eliminated as you work through the drafts. Others can be edited or revised in consultation with your academic advisor, professor, or mentor.
4.      Consider using one of the two options discussed below to organize the information in each component.
-       The first option is the self-teaching résumé, which can be used for curriculum vitae and provides templates for use with standard word-processing programs. The templates are detailed structural outlines of documents that provide a starting point and some graphic assistance in visualizing a finished product. These self-teaching templates also provide explicit instructions about the nature of the material to be entered in a particular section or location, along with instructions that link the various parts to form a focused, coherent, and concise document. Your résumé should not look exactly like the templates and must be customized in the curriculum vitae format.
-       The second option is to use any word-processing program to delineate the components, which allows for more flexibility and makes revising the document much easier throughout the whole process.
This work shall be addressing curriculum vitae for different purposes among the major ones are; job-seeking in non-academic and academic fields, and scholarships.  By the end of this section, you will find out which one to write for yourself.
Identification (as this section opens your CV, omit the heading)
            Include your name (set apart prominently at the top of the first page, using boldface, capitalization and a larger font size at your discretion), address, complete telephone number/s, and e-mail address. Some people include both personal and department addresses to emphasize their current academic affiliation.
Personal information
            Include your citizenship, date and place of birth, marital status, height, weight among others upon request. In some fields, this information is customarily included, most frequently for funding considerations (e.g. for a grant-funded postdoctoral position). In other fields it would be viewed as inappropriate. Follow the norm in your field.
Note: In Nigeria, this is customary and must be included unless otherwise stated by the provisions of the job you are applying for!
Professional/Career/Vocational/Research Objectives
            The first component of a CV states your objective(s), or the reason(s), you are distributing your CV. Your objective can be as brief as one sentence, stating a general goal, or as long as a brief paragraph, expressing both short-term and long-term goals. Be sure to research carefully all graduate and professional programs and areas of employment that interest you. Connect your goals, which should be logically and clearly stated, to those of the program or position for which you are applying. Next, avoid vague or obscure language that fails to express precisely what you would like to do. Finally, use the worksheet that follows to prepare preliminary, revised, and final drafts of your objectives.
Education
            The objective of this component, as well as the component that describes your coursework, is to provide graduate and professional schools and prospective employers with a brief but thorough understanding of your academic background. In this section you should indicate the following:
• degrees and the dates they were received
• diplomas
• certificates
• names of universities, colleges, professional schools, or other institutions you have attended
• your majors and minors along with your grade point average for each
• your cumulative grade point average for each institution attended as well as for each degree
            Place all graduate degrees, as well as all completed coursework toward a graduate or professional degree, before your undergraduate degrees. Highlight significant academic achievements, such as strong grade point averages in specific courses, as well as any extensive background you might have in areas of study outside your major and/or minor. If you are an undergraduate and a candidate for honors or high honors in your major, indicate as much in this component.
            List all institutions, degrees, and graduation dates in reverse chronological order.  If you attended an institution but did not earn a degree, you do not need to list it on your CV unless the training you received was vital to your career – language courses taken abroad, for instance. Some postdoctoral researchers include their postdoctoral training here, others include it under their research section; follow the norm in your field.
            When listing your degrees, incorporate in-view to degrees that are not yet obtained but are on-going. For instance;
2012 – 2013:  Masters degree in product engineering (in-view), Department of
Mechanical Engineering, University of Tuskegee, Alabama, America.
Professional Qualifications
            List all professional bodies or institutions you belong to or affiliated with and your position in such institution.  Example of such bodies in Nigeria are Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Nigeria Institute of Management (NIM), International Project Management Professionals (IPMP), Onshore Offshore Oil and Gas Professionals (O3G), Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Certified Environmentalists(cEnv), Nigerian Institute of Food Science and Technology (NIFST), Institute of Strategic Management of Nigeria (ISMN) among others.
Relevant (Work) Experience
            Listing of positions (part-time, full-time, volunteer, temporary and permanent) related to the work sought. Include: department, firm, agency, or organization; complete name; city and state; job/position title; and dates. Also include a brief description of your activities/duties, using strong action verbs. This section can be broken down into subcategories of related experience such as Research Positions, Teaching Experience, etc. List these in reverse chronological order.
Other Experience
            Groupings of other experiences (including volunteer work and/or internships) can enhance your CV. Your experience can also be broken into other categories such as: Counseling, Administration, Volunteer, Community, Internship, leadership and so on. Entries within each section should be in reverse chronological order.
Publications/ Creative works
            Include bibliographic citations of articles, research reports, and book reviews that you have published. If applicable to your field, poems, musical recitals, or art exhibits may be included in this section. Depending upon your discipline, as you gain experience, you will further separate these items into different categories, such as “book review,” “articles in refereed journals,” books,” etc. Use the form of citation appropriate to your field. In order to list something as “forthcoming” in this section, you should have a reasonably firm sense of when the publication will appear in print, unless otherwise directed by your advisor.  In your work experience, you can also list projects, inventions, innovations or list other creative work(s) done or ongoing. Your major achievements in previous workplace(s) if necessary in your prospective job, should also be listed here.
Personal skills and competencies
            Having discovered and identified your skills and competencies, you can employ them to constructing a powerful, mind-blowing, employable, irresistible and promoting CV.  You may not have those gigantic professional certifications but that skill you obtained in the Information Communication and Technology, technical, graphical and art, fashion and designing, quick-service-sector among others, can place you in that job or position of your dream. 
Hobbies/Interests
            These are the activities that interest you or that you enjoy partaking in.  They are source of joy and excitement to you.  Besides, they are the things that keep your mind in good working condition. Your hobbies in a CV should display your ability to adapt and work in the environment provided by the job.  Why most people loose their job opportunities is because of this.  For instance, somebody applying for a job in a bank, project firm, chemical and petroleum industry has nothing to do with hobbies like cooking, dancing, singing, fashion and designing.  In the same vein, these hobbies can go in a hotel management firm, restaurant and other related firm.  Directly put, your hobbies should determine the job and company you are applying for (to) if you are really working to learn and not to earn.  A well packaged presentation of your hobbies has the potential to display your passion, zeal and will to work in a particular company with ease.  Anybody that his hobby is travelling at least three times in a week is likely not to be employed in food processing firm while such a person can be seen as a veritable tool in the marketing and project firms.

References
            This can be at the tail-end of your CV or can be on a separate sheet.  It is a list of the people that can easily provide information to your prospective employer when contacted.  So, it is therefore necessary that you must know the people you are including in your CV.  In your references, you are not expected to use your family members, relatives and friends (in some cases) because your references are seen as independent entities that have nothing to loose whether you are employed in the work or not.  Some of the people you might use are your academic supervisors/advisers, professors, managers of where you have previously worked among others.  It is on this that I will advise that your relationship with people should be harmonious and not thunderous.  Your social and hardworking life should strike a balance in your place of work and your relationship with people. 
This is a vital and indispensable key in information dissemination!
            List the names, titles, and academic affiliations of your references. List your references in order of importance (e.g. your dissertation director/advisor first, followed by other members of your committee or other advisors who know your work well). It is customary to list the mailing and e-mail addresses and telephone numbers of your references. Follow the standard practice in your field.
For academic or research work and scholarship purposes, they following will be included.
Coursework
            Using your most recent transcripts, provide complete course titles, with brief descriptions where appropriate, so that prospective employers have a clear indication that course content is congruent with job requirements. You might also find it advantageous to list the grades you have received in some courses if you want to highlight academic performance or describe a trend in that performance.
            Do not include course numbers or abbreviations because they are irrelevant and institution-specific.
Honors/Achievements/Awards/Kudos
            List and briefly describe all special recognitions you have received, including study group participation, community and institutional service, departmental awards, athletic awards and/or lists, dean’s awards, scholarships, fellowships, community awards, professional awards, academic awards, and memberships in academic organizations.
As a general rule, do not list high school awards or achievements since they might diminish the importance of undergraduate and graduate honors, achievements, awards, and kudos. If, however, you have significant high school awards or achievements you want to highlight, discuss with your academic advisor, professor, or mentor whether or not to include them.
Thesis/Dissertation Abstract
            Summarize your thesis or dissertation in a brief abstract. Include the full title and date or term of completion. Consult your academic advisor, professor, or mentor regarding the appropriate wording of this statement. Some disciplines (for example, chemistry and psychology) have specific editorial formats for abstracts.
Research Interests
            Be as specific and precise as possible regarding the description of your research interests. Strike a balance between being specific enough to ensure congruence between your objectives and those of the program and/or employment option for which you are submitting your CV and being general enough not to preclude options that you might pursue if your research objectives are flexible. This delicate balancing act makes this component extremely complex and often requires that it be developed in consultation with your academic advisor, professor, mentor, representatives of graduate and professional schools, and/or a selected group of prospective employers.
Research and/or Laboratory Experience
            Provide detailed descriptions of your research and laboratory experiences. Include information about the ways in which your research fits into a given profession or into a particular laboratory’s ongoing research. Be sure to give the title of each project as well as information concerning its actual or potential publication. Also, list the names and titles of professors or other individuals who have supervised or are currently supervising your research.
Teaching Interests and Experience
            For this component, describe only those teaching interests and experiences that can be documented. However, you might also include tutoring experience as well as any group learning experience in which you were a leader, such as laboratory or writing center experience.
Instrumentation Experience
            If you have used standard instruments in a laboratory— for example, computer hardware, photographic, or audiovisual equipment—describe that use. You will probably not need to provide extensive details regarding the devices themselves. On the other hand, if you have used state-of-the-art instruments, it is appropriate to describe both the instruments and the extent to which you have used them.


Specialized Skills
            Describe in detail any interpersonal, leadership, organizational or analytical skills you have as well as their applications and the contexts in which you have used them. Do the same for specialized skills involving any languages, computers/technology, computer software, and so on.
Students who intend to pursue a graduate degree should clearly describe their levels of proficiency in their intended field of study. Vague descriptions might be interpreted as a marginal degree of competency.
Publications/Presentations/Works-in-Progress
            If you have authored or coauthored publications, provide appropriate bibliographic descriptions. List unpublished manuscripts only if they are actually being considered for publication. Artists and musicians, for example, should provide complete descriptions of works-in-progress. Provide detailed descriptions of presentations, particularly those made before academic societies and professional associations. Documentation should include title of the presentation, name of the organization, location of the meeting, and date.
            Although classroom presentations would ordinarily not be included here, there are occasions when students are selected or encouraged to give a presentation because of superior performance in class or because they have researched a topic that is being studied in class. In these instances, such experiences should be listed. If you want to highlight significant classroom presentations, you might consider establishing a separate component for them.
Work Experience
            In this section, list all of your work experiences, including internships, summer jobs, and campus employment. Give brief but detailed descriptions of your responsibilities. Use action verbs to describe those responsibilities.
            Provide the following information: titles, names of the organizations or businesses, locations of the organizations or businesses, and dates of employment.
Background
            This component anticipates the section on graduate and professional school applications where applicants are asked to provide additional background or information that might not have been requested in other sections of an application. In addition, this component might include information regarding citizenship, prolonged residence abroad, and/or unusual educational or work experiences.
Community Service
            This component includes volunteer work, contributions to a community, and/or membership on university-wide committees. There might be some overlap for undergraduates between this component and co-curricular activities.
Co-curricular Activities
            List and describe campus programs and activities in which you have been an active participant, such as student government, athletics, sororities, fraternities, academic clubs, and language clubs.
Interests
            This component includes avocations such as bird-watching, stamp collecting, chess, rugby, antique collecting, and music. List interests as a separate component even though they may appear elsewhere in your CV.
Travel
            Include extended international travel as a result of academic study abroad; however, do not include brief visits abroad as a tourist. If, on the other hand, you have had extensive domestic travel that is related to your objectives, mention it here. When appropriate, list cities, states, regions, or countries alphabetically with descriptions of experience and length of visits.
References/Letters of Recommendation
            This component is entirely optional; however, if you choose to include references on your CV, list only the names and titles of individuals you have asked to write recommendations for you. Including letters of recommendation depends on the preference of the employing institution or university to which you are applying. Some institutions maintain placement files and/or dossiers for students; therefore, requests for recommendations are generally referred to undergraduate institutions or to the institution of your most recent attendance. If appropriate, you may simply indicate one of the following on your CV:
1.      Placement credentials available from the name of the institution or the name of the appropriate office.
2.      References available upon request.
            Professors, deans, chairs, and those who supervise your work are frequently asked to be references. Be sure to ask these individuals in advance for their permission to use them as references.
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