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Friday, October 11, 2002
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The CV Doctor ReturnsCareer TalkPractical guidance for academic job seekers from professional career counselors If you're like most academics, your CV could use a little work. Maybe you offer too much information, or not enough. It could be that your descriptions are too wordy or too vague. Or maybe the format looks haphazard. You've come to the right place. For the fourth year in a row, we asked job candidates to submit their vitas for an online critique. Hundreds of you responded, and we would have liked to help each of you. Unfortunately, we were able to evaluate only five. We selected vitas that were already strong -- so they could serve as models for our readers -- but that could benefit from some revisions. We are grateful to the five candidates who gave us permission to use their CVs. Their names, contact information, and other identifying details have been removed. We provide a brief introduction to each CV and offer suggestions for improving it in footnotes. We chose CVs from the following academics: If, after reading our suggestions, you still need help, you can find plenty of additional advice. Last year, we evaluated three faculty CV's and reworked each vita into a résumé for an administrative or a nonacademic job. In 2000, we reworked the CV's of Ph.D.'s at different stages of their careers. And in 1999, we evaluated five CV's in disciplines from art to biology. For more information, consult our book, The Academic Job Search Handbook, as well as the materials put out by your disciplinary association. Have a question you'd like answered in Career Talk? Send it to us at careertalk@chronicle.com While we are unable to answer letters personally, we will consider them as material for future columns. Confidentiality is assured. |
Articles:On Course
So you want to apply to teaching-oriented colleges but don't have any classroom experience?
First Person
The rigid standards of hiring and tenure are all that stand in the way of the humanities professor as thriving public scholar, writes Patricia Nelson Limerick.
First Person
A Ph.D. in geological sciences always knew he wanted to teach; so how did his career get so focused on research?
The Fund Raiser
Sometimes all it takes is a parking ticket for a donor to reconsider giving to a college.
Resources:Library:
Landing your first job
On the tenure track
Mid-career and on
Administrative careers
Nonacademic careers for
Ph.D.'s
Talk about your career
Elsewhere Online:
Perspectives
Wall Street Journal
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