Argon Posted February 15, 2015 Posted February 15, 2015 I'll be starting the first year of my PhD program next fall, and I was just curious: what does one put on their resume/CV as a first year grad student? Putting PhD candidate isn't right because you have to pass your qualifying exams, right? So, what would you reasonably put?
Eigen Posted February 15, 2015 Posted February 15, 2015 PhD student, estimated graduation date 2020. Or something like that. Can also put PhD (In Progress, Estimated Graduation 2020). If you have an advisor, put the advisor's name. I've never actually seen anyone put candidate on a CV. I have seen people put ABD on a CV, but mostly when it's people posting examples of what not to do.
fuzzylogician Posted February 15, 2015 Posted February 15, 2015 I would suggest updating the Education section of the CV (which should be on the first page of the CV!), e.g. "2011--2014 Undergrad University, BA in Chemical Engineering (cum laude), minor in Basket Weaving (summa cum laude). 2015-- Awesome University, PhD student in Chemical Engineering." (I don't think estimated graduation date is all that important when you're a first-year. When you go on the job market and want to stress that you'll graduate that year, then you can add it.) Otherwise, there is no need to add anything else to the CV.
TakeruK Posted February 15, 2015 Posted February 15, 2015 In addition to the above suggestions, some people just prefer putting the year of graduation, so for a first year student (no expected grad date yet, no thesis title, no advisor), you might just put: current PhD in X, Awesome University 2014 BSc in X, Another Awesome University Thesis: Blah Blah Blah, advised by Prof. Y When you know more information (advisor, thesis topic/title, expected grad date), you can add it
Argon Posted February 15, 2015 Author Posted February 15, 2015 Thanks for the suggestions and ideas! I know I'm getting a bit ahead of myself here, but I was curious nonetheless!
SNPCracklePop Posted February 20, 2015 Posted February 20, 2015 This should serve as a great resource as your CV evolves: http://theprofessorisin.com/2012/01/12/dr-karens-rules-of-the-academic-cv/ geographyrocks 1
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now