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Nine resume strategies for teachers and educators
Education and its related career paths are showing steady growth, according to the U.S. Department of Labor's projections. Experts anticipate this growth will continue through at least 2008. What's more, education has changed. When we talk about education professionals, we're no longer referring to just classroom teachers. Specializations and sub-specializations like special education, corporate training and education administration have proliferated. To take advantage of these opportunities, you must be an educated job seeker. That means knowing what you want in your career, where the hiring action is, what qualifications and credentials you need to attain your desired career goals and how best to market your qualifications. It is not enough to be a talented teacher, librarian, administrator or training and development professional. You must also be a strategic marketer able to package and promote your experience to take advantage of this wave of employment opportunity. Educators should have four discrete sections of their resume:
In addition, educators need to know the nine core strategies for writing effective and successful resumes: 1. Clarify who you are and how you want to be perceived. The very first step is to identify your career interests,
goals, and objectives. You cannot write an effective resume without knowing,
at least to some degree, what type or types of positions you will be seeking. You are the product, and you must create a document
that powerfully communicates the value of that product. 3. Use key words. These are words and phrases specific to the education
industry. When you use these words and phrases in your resume, in your
cover letter, or during an interview you communicate a familiarity with
the relevant issues. Give a broad-based picture of what you were responsible
for and how well you did it. Then, save the "little" stuff
the details for the interview. Your resume should lead the reader where you want
to go and presents just the right organization, content and appearance to stimulate
a productive discussion. Try to make it as easy as possible for readers to
grasp essential facts from your resume. Be consistent and make information easy
to find. A resume that focuses only on job functions can
be dry and uninteresting. You'll create a more powerful resume when you translate
your functions into achievements. Don't push your skills and qualifications outside
the bounds of what is truthful. You never want to be in a position where you
have to defend something on your resume. 9: Be confident. There is only one individual with the specific
combination of employment experiences, qualifications, achievements and educational
credentials you have. Use this to position yourself as a commodity in the job
market.
JIST Publishing is an Indianapolis-based publisher and authority on the topics of career, job search, business and families in crisis. The JIST staff help people help themselves in career and life by publishing practical, self-directed products and training tools that are used in employment training, education, business, counseling, therapy and school settings. From Expert Resumes for Teachers and Educators, by Wendy S. Enelow and Louise M. Kursmark © 2002. Used with permission of JIST Publishing, Indianapolis, Ind. |
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