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CV/Resume submissions for grad school


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Posted

I have 2 questions regarding CV/Resume submissions for grad school

 

1.       It’s my understanding that a CV “is a fairly detailed overview of your life’s accomplishments, especially those most relevant to the realm of academia” – I can see how someone who has a master’s could have a CV, but are undergrads expected to be able to create one also?

 

2.       If a resume would be more appropriate, then should the content of the resume I submit to grad schools be different from the one I typically submit to employers? The resume I submit to employers only lists the tasks I performed in the labs I’ve worked in but does not highlight the fact that I had independent projects..

 

 

Posted

"It’s my understanding that a CV “is a fairly detailed overview of your life’s accomplishments, especially those most relevant to the realm of academia

 

Correction: "A CV is a overview of your accomplishments that are only relevant to the realm of academia."

Posted

I applied last year and I can tell you what my CV consisted of. It was two pages long and had the following headlines: Research Interest, Research Skills (Straight up just a list of every technique I've done), Education (GPA, GRE test scores, Major GPA), Research Experience (My PI and what I specifically did on the project in about 2 or 3 sentences), Teaching Experience, Leadership Roles, Awards, Publications and Presentations. Hope that helps you

Posted

When I applied as an undergraduate to PhD programs, I made a CV/resumé hybrid. I had headings for education, research experience, grants/scholarships/awards, presentations, manuscripts in prep., teaching experience, outreach/service, and professional societies. I didn't have many points under each heading, so I elaborated in spots like the research experience and outreach/service to flesh it out more. As a first year PhD student this year, I cut the fluff from my application version. It's rough seeing how small my CV is now, but it motivates me to work harder. 

Posted

You should at least try to keep the format of a real CV IMO. You can add some fluff if need be and cut it off later. For example, my CV has the headings: Education (includes degrees and relevent course work), Research Experience (Includes a cupple bullet points about each position), Publications/Presenations, Taching Experience, Honors and Awards, Relevent Skills, and I am currently on the fence about whether to include a communitry involvement section. I have great stuff here like volunteering abroad, I am on the board of a nonprofit, etc. Grad schools dont care that much about this stuff I know but I I wonder if it could put someone over the edge if they are deciding between 2 similar candidates? Like I said, I am on the fence because they might just not care at all.

Posted

You should at least try to keep the format of a real CV IMO. You can add some fluff if need be and cut it off later. For example, my CV has the headings: Education (includes degrees and relevent course work), Research Experience (Includes a cupple bullet points about each position), Publications/Presenations, Taching Experience, Honors and Awards, Relevent Skills, and I am currently on the fence about whether to include a communitry involvement section. I have great stuff here like volunteering abroad, I am on the board of a nonprofit, etc. Grad schools dont care that much about this stuff I know but I I wonder if it could put someone over the edge if they are deciding between 2 similar candidates? Like I said, I am on the fence because they might just not care at all.

 

Many professional CVs include outreach sections, because that is a major component of being a scientist. It is your broader impacts. Grad schools will care about this, even though it will be less than research and grades. I got comments about my different outreach experiences during interviews and discussions with POIs because they wanted to know if I was going to continue outreach as a graduate student and how I would implement outreach in my research plans. Since an important part of being funded in science is having your broader impacts section, it's important to know that a grad student is going to be able to have a strong broader impacts background and future for their proposals.

Posted

Many professional CVs include outreach sections, because that is a major component of being a scientist. It is your broader impacts. Grad schools will care about this, even though it will be less than research and grades. I got comments about my different outreach experiences during interviews and discussions with POIs because they wanted to know if I was going to continue outreach as a graduate student and how I would implement outreach in my research plans. Since an important part of being funded in science is having your broader impacts section, it's important to know that a grad student is going to be able to have a strong broader impacts background and future for their proposals.

 

Thanks, that opinion that helps alot! I will keep that info in there.

Posted

one other question... there are lab techniques I learned through laboratory classes and then there are techniques I learned through working in labs. Would it be inappropriate to list the skills I learned in laboratory courses? 

Posted

one other question... there are lab techniques I learned through laboratory classes and then there are techniques I learned through working in labs. Would it be inappropriate to list the skills I learned in laboratory courses? 

Depends how it was used in your courses...If it was something you learned and used frequently throughout the lab then definitely list it. If it was a technique you were taught and only used it for 1 experiment then I wouldn't list it. 

Posted

one other question... there are lab techniques I learned through laboratory classes and then there are techniques I learned through working in labs. Would it be inappropriate to list the skills I learned in laboratory courses? 

I listed every technique, including techniques I did once in lab classes. I think that's fine. You're not lying. And if you did that technique again, it would be somewhat familiar to you. You wouldn't need a complete refresher.

Posted

one other question... there are lab techniques I learned through laboratory classes and then there are techniques I learned through working in labs. Would it be inappropriate to list the skills I learned in laboratory courses? 

It doesn't matter where you learned the techniques, it just matter that you can do them well. I would only list techniques that you can do with a high level of competence, and from my experience, that's what your employer/advisor expects when they read your CV. If you could teach someone else the technique, then it should go on your CV. Otherwise, omit it. 

Posted

When I applied as an undergraduate to PhD programs, I made a CV/resumé hybrid. I had headings for education, research experience, grants/scholarships/awards, presentations, manuscripts in prep., teaching experience, outreach/service, and professional societies. I didn't have many points under each heading, so I elaborated in spots like the research experience and outreach/service to flesh it out more. As a first year PhD student this year, I cut the fluff from my application version. It's rough seeing how small my CV is now, but it motivates me to work harder. 

This was my apprach as well.  

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