Be
Professional In Writing Your Curriculum Vitae
Primary materials
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Applicant Information
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Education
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Dissertation Title and Advisor
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Awards/Honors/Patents
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Grants/Fellowships
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Research Experience
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Job Experience
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Publications and Presentations
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Related Professional Experience
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Languages
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Other- Memberships, Associations, Conferences
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References
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Supplementary Materials
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Cover Letter
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Dissertation Abstract
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Statement of Research and Scholarly Interests
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Statement of Teaching Interests
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Course lists
Primary Materials
Applicant Information
Your
name should appear on the top of each page. On the first page
include your name, address, phone number, fax number, and email
address. Page numbers should appear on all pages except for the
first. When including your email address consider this communication
with an employer to be professional. It is advised to avoid "nick
names" or "cute" automatic responses. This also applies for phone
messages.
Education
In
reverse chronological order list all of your degrees from college
on, with the name of the institution and date they were awarded.
List the date you expect to receive the degree for the program you
are currently in. It is standard to list the name of your advisor
and your thesis title.
From this point on you have more latitude in shaping the
organization of your CV. You should be guided by your strengths,
requirements for the job, and conventions of your discipline.
Honors and Awards (Grants, Fellowships and Patents, etc.)
Place Honors/Awards near the top of the CV (unless you have few,
then put later or omit). This is a good place to list
research-related and dissertation-supported grants, fellowships,
awards and patents. Scientists may create a separate section for
"Research Grants", which would probably come later in the CV.
Research Experience
Scientists will briefly describe their postdoctoral, doctoral, and
possibly undergraduate research. You should include both substance
and techniques employed if relevant. List names of the institution,
professor, project, and dates. Along with descriptions note any
contribution you made (Some scientists append a "Statement of
Research Interests")
Teaching Experience
Where you place this section depends on the target institution (i.e.
small teaching college) as well as your strengths as a candidate.
The basic information should include: Where, What, When you have
taught and your titles i.e. teaching fellow or lecturer.
Publications and Presentations
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Where you place this section depends on the strength of your
publication record. If substantial, it may come first. If too
lengthy or short it can come at the end of the CV or have an
additional page. Some candidates will subdivide this category
into:
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Publications (if have you enough, you can separate this into
Books, Abstracts, Reviews, other publications, etc...). Use
standard bibliographic form for publications.
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Papers and Presentations. Include dates/locations with titles
of your presentations.
Avoid listing published abstracts in with papers. List Abstracts as
a separate section. Otherwise, it gives the impression of
"padding."
Related Professional Experience
Use
this category for any experience that is related to teaching,
research, and administration, i.e. conference organizing, tutoring,
and committee work.
Languages
Accurately assess your knowledge level of a language: native,
fluent, proficient or working knowledge.
Optional Sections
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Memberships of Professional Organizations
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Scholarly Associations
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Travel or Study Abroad
References
Most
academics tend to operate within small informal networks, the names
of references will convey significant information to most readers.
Most applicants will list their references at the end of their CV.
Include:
Three references are expected, but you may add more if their
evaluations would add significant information
** make sure your references know they are listed and have a copy of
your CV**
Supplementary Materials
In
addition to the CV, most academic job applications will contain the
following:
Cover Letter
A
cover letter should be concise and to the point. Certainly no longer
than one page. Simply state why you are applying, why you are
interested in the position/school, and your relevant background. Let
them know you are appending a CV, a statement of research and
teaching interests, etc. DO NOT discuss these in the cover letter.
Direct them to where they can find the information. Do not bury the
information in a three page letter and make them look for it, as
they won't. Use your department's letter head and your professional
address. Do not use plain paper and your home address-- that's a big
red flag (at least in Biology).
Dissertation Abstract
A
dissertation abstract is a clear and concise summary of your work,
placing it within its scholarly context and noting its contribution
to the field. The summary should be comprehensible to people outside
your field, but scholarly enough to interest those familiar with
your area of expertise (HAVE FACULTY IN AND OUT OF YOUR AREA READ
THIS). The summary is typically 1-2 pages appended at the end of
your CV and clipped or stapled together with previous pages.
Statement of Research and Scholarly Interests
Scientists are customarily asked to submit a "Statement of
Research". This is meant to be a 2-4 page statement of past,
current, and future research interests. You should describe your
past and present research methodology, lab skills, and results. For
the future section, tell the reader what you hope to do for the next
3- 5 years and how you might involve students (undergraduates,
graduates, and post-docs) in the work. Normally, this work will
follow on the momentum of your own postdoctoral studies, but if it
does not (this would be rare) be sure to explain why.
Teaching Interests
A
“Statement of Teaching Interests” is typically required as part of
the application process for an Assistant Professor position. Tell
the reader what you feel competent to teach. If you are applying for
a job where teaching biochemistry is one of the requirements as
stated in the job ad, then you better be sure you tell them you want
to teach biochemistry. This may sound trite, but you would be amazed
at the number of people who fail to follow this seemingly
self-evident step.
Course Lists/Transcript
Occasionally applicants are asked to submit a list of their graduate
courses or a transcript.