- Posts: 1
- Joined: Dec 19, 2022
- Mon Dec 19, 2022 1:14 pm
#98586
I am weighing a few strategies for how much of my work experience to include in my resume, and I would appreciate some advice.
For background, I am a non-traditional applicant: I took the scenic route (six years) completing my double-major in undergraduate and, 11 years later after that, completed my graduate degree this past summer. Aside from participating in extracurricular activities, which my need for employment prevented, the "Educational" portion of my resume is not a problem.
My main concerns center around how to do address all the time spent between completing my bachelors and masters degrees.
As things stand, my resume includes only my most recent place of employment (which seems standard), as well as work experiences and leadership positions that play key roles in my personal statement. However, the bulk of my work experience in between undergraduate and graduate school consists of menial blue-collar work (three different employers). The nature of my work at those jobs is clearly irrelevant to my ability to succeed in law school, and I am concerned that including those jobs would distract someone looking at my resume from the concise, stream-lined presentation I feel my resume currently offers.
I recognize a resume need not be comprehensive and serves more as a marketing-tool than an exhaustive account of my experiences, and that law school resume differs from something I would provide when applying for a job. Hence, my resume is currently only a page long and very well-arranged to be pleasing to the eye upon first looks.
But I can also see how someone closely scrutinizing my resume might find themselves raising questions about what else I was doing with my time besides the work experiences and leaderships role that my resume currently mentions, leading to concerns about why I do not mention as much.
Should I...
(A) include that additional information on the resume itself, sacrificing brevity and conciseness for comprehensiveness,
(B) provide an addendum that fills in the gaps on my resume, and mention on my resume that such an addendum has been provided, or
(C) stop overthinking all this?
Thanks for your help!
For background, I am a non-traditional applicant: I took the scenic route (six years) completing my double-major in undergraduate and, 11 years later after that, completed my graduate degree this past summer. Aside from participating in extracurricular activities, which my need for employment prevented, the "Educational" portion of my resume is not a problem.
My main concerns center around how to do address all the time spent between completing my bachelors and masters degrees.
As things stand, my resume includes only my most recent place of employment (which seems standard), as well as work experiences and leadership positions that play key roles in my personal statement. However, the bulk of my work experience in between undergraduate and graduate school consists of menial blue-collar work (three different employers). The nature of my work at those jobs is clearly irrelevant to my ability to succeed in law school, and I am concerned that including those jobs would distract someone looking at my resume from the concise, stream-lined presentation I feel my resume currently offers.
I recognize a resume need not be comprehensive and serves more as a marketing-tool than an exhaustive account of my experiences, and that law school resume differs from something I would provide when applying for a job. Hence, my resume is currently only a page long and very well-arranged to be pleasing to the eye upon first looks.
But I can also see how someone closely scrutinizing my resume might find themselves raising questions about what else I was doing with my time besides the work experiences and leaderships role that my resume currently mentions, leading to concerns about why I do not mention as much.
Should I...
(A) include that additional information on the resume itself, sacrificing brevity and conciseness for comprehensiveness,
(B) provide an addendum that fills in the gaps on my resume, and mention on my resume that such an addendum has been provided, or
(C) stop overthinking all this?
Thanks for your help!