Help Wanted: Writing Professional Resumes

Help Wanted: Writing Professional Resumes

  • Resources & Preparation
  • Instructional Plan
  • Related Resources

In this series of seven class sessions, students will work through the process of creating a professional resume. With a special emphasis on helping students learn about resumes as professional documents, this lesson will discuss why writers create resumes, why they must consider the rhetorical situation of the resume, and why both content and presentation are so important in this type of writing. Students will analyze and critique existing resumes, create their own resume and tailor it to a real job posting, peer review resumes for content and presentation, and then present their resumes as professional documents to the class.

Featured Resources

ReadWriteThink NoteTaker : Students can use this online tool to take notes and organize them into an outline format.

From Theory to Practice

Creating a resume is one of the first steps students take to prepare them for their future roles as professionals who know how to communicate in multiple contexts. The process of creating a resume asks students to begin envisioning themselves as professionals and calls upon them to understand a new audience for their writing: employers and other business professionals (see Dean 55-61). In her book Genre Theory: Teaching, Writing, Being , NCTE author and consultant Deborah Dean notes the need for educators to help students "understand the need to adapt writing to situations," and the complex tasks involved in responding to a job posting with a professional resume provide such a teaching and learning opportunity (5). As they learn about the dimensions of resumes, including their purpose, format, and language, students gain greater insight into the social dimensions of writing and have the opportunity to explore the "implications of choosing to follow or resist the expectations associated with [various] situations" (7). Further Reading

Common Core Standards

This resource has been aligned to the Common Core State Standards for states in which they have been adopted. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, CCSS alignments are forthcoming.

State Standards

This lesson has been aligned to standards in the following states. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, standard alignments are not currently available for that state.

NCTE/IRA National Standards for the English Language Arts

  • 1. Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
  • 3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
  • 4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
  • 5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
  • 6. Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
  • 7. Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.
  • 8. Students use a variety of technological and information resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks, video) to gather and synthesize information and to create and communicate knowledge.
  • 9. Students develop an understanding of and respect for diversity in language use, patterns, and dialects across cultures, ethnic groups, geographic regions, and social roles.
  • 11. Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
  • 12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).

Materials and Technology

  • Suggested Online Student Resume Resources
  • Resume Writing Resources  
  • Resume Action Words  
  • Resume Peer Review Guide  
  • Using ReadWriteThink Notetaker to Draft Resumes  
  • Analyzing Your Writing Process Assignment  
  • Professional Resume Rubric

Preparation

  • Collect resumes and resume resources for students to explore and critique. (See Resources section .) Collect both effective and ineffective examples and prepare several to be shown on an overhead, LCD projector, or document camera.  
  • Collect back issues of classified ads/job postings prior to Session Four to ensure that all students have a job listing from which to work.  
  • Make sure students have access to computer labs for Sessions One through Six .  
  • Bookmark the Suggested Online Student Resume Resources .  
  • Prepare copies of all handouts for distribution in class.  
  • Test the Venn Diagram tool and the ReadWriteThink NoteTaker on your computers to familiarize yourself with the tools.  
  • Bookmark the ReadWriteThink NoteTaker for student use in Session Three .

Student Objectives

Students will

  • analyze professional resumes to learn what makes them effective or ineffective for an audience.  
  • analyze and describe the audience for a resume, noting its purpose and how the audience responds to the document.  
  • create a professional resume of their own using document and audience analysis, drafting, peer response, and revision.  
  • reflect on their writing process, noting how this assignment will be useful to them in their future writing responsibilities.

Session One

  • Ask students to engage in a Think-Pair-Share activity by spending five minutes freewriting about resumes. They may write about their experiences with resumes and their perceptions of resumes, including resumes they have written, friends'/family members' resumes they have seen, what they know about them, why they are important, how they look, and what they say about the writer.  
  • Ask students to get into small groups to share their freewriting. Select a recorder for each group to take notes about what the group discusses to share with the whole class.  
  • Bring students together as a class and ask them to share each group's notes about resumes. The teacher or a class volunteer should make a list on the overhead or board for use later in the lesson process, especially as students are writing their reflective essays in Session Six .  
  • Project for students two or three sample effective resumes. Discuss the main parts of each. Explain that while each resume meets generally accepted criteria that suggest it is "effective," the effectiveness of any resume is situated within the context of the job posting and the demands of the given job or career. You will discuss this issue in more detail in sessions to come.  
  • Why do we need resumes?  
  • Do all jobs require a resume?  
  • Why do some jobs ask for a resume and others do not?  
  • What does a resume say about a person?
  • Ask students to shift to their own search for guidance on resume writing by looking at available resources on the Internet. Direct students to the Suggested Online Student Resume Resources and give each student a copy of the Resume Writing Resources handout and go over its requirements. Students should review each site or resource by taking note of the kinds of help offered for beginning resume writers and keeping track of specific information they think will be important as they create their own resumes.  
  • For the next session, ask each student to find one additional resume help resource and bring it to class. Students should add this resource to their Resume Writing Resources handout. They may find this by going online to a search engine such as Google or Ask.com , by going to a career center and getting a pamphlet or booklet, or by going to a library and finding a book or article on resume writing.

Session Two

  • Build from the work of the previous session by showing students a few more effective sample resumes as well as some samples that are clearly problematic. Lead a brief discussion about the strengths and weaknesses students perceive in the various samples.  
  • Elicit from students the basic required sections of a resume: Objective, Education, and Work Experience. Ask students to brainstorm other sections that may also be important to include on a resume (Volunteer Experience, Special Skills, Awards Received, Certifications or Licenses, Involvement in Clubs or Societies, etc.).  
  • Ask students to consider the extent to which having the expected headings and format is enough to make a resume effective. While projecting an accepted "effective" resume, have half of the students quickwrite a job listing for which the resume is well-suited; the other half should compose a job listing for which the resume is ill-suited.  
  • Have students share these divergent job descriptions and facilitate a brief discussion on the central importance of the job listing in assessing a resume's overall effectiveness.  
  • Inform students that they will now be forming professional writing groups of three or four students. Tell students they will work with these groups for the duration of the lesson, serving as professional reviewers and helping each other with writing and reviewing their resumes. (Teachers may choose to divide students into groups based on their career interests.)  
  • Ask students to go to their groups and, with reference to the sample resumes from this session and last, produce a list what makes a resume different from other types of writing they have seen or used in the past. Ask them to consider abstract issues such as audience and purpose as well as concrete issues such as content and form.  
  • Ask students to share their lists with the class. Discuss how resumes are a genre of writing known as professional writing. Make a list on the board or overhead listing the differences between professional writing (including resumes) and other types of writing. You may wish to use the Venn Diagram tool to facilitate this process. Share with students that these are elements they will need to know when creating their own resumes.  
  • Now ask students to get out their new resume help resources and Resume Writing Resources handout they were assigned to bring. Ask them to compare their resources, noting what each source says that is similar to or different from the other sources. Ask groups to create a list of their own resume-writing tips and share these with the class.  
  • Collect the Resume Writing Resources handout and tell students that for Session Four , they need to search newspapers, local career sites, Monster.com , or Careerbuilder.com for job listings that interest them. They need to bring three potential job listings to class with them for the that session.

Session Three

  • Inform students that during this session they will begin drafting the outline of their own professional resume. While the specifics of the resume will be tailored to the job posting (see Session Four), students will create the basis for the more specific resume in this session.  
  • Remind students of the typical sections of a resume from the previous session and share with them the importance of descriptive action words in these sections of a resume. Give them the Resume Action Words handout and ask them to add to it as they review various resume resources.
  • Use the  Resume Action Words handout as a segue to the overall requirements for the resume assignment. Distribute the sample Professional Resume Rubric and discuss the requirements for a strong resume. For now, focus on the elements that the group has already discussed, but assure students that other elements will be covered in the rest of the process.  
  • Direct students to the ReadWriteThink NoteTaker where they can begin typing the sections of their resume, including bulleted lists of the tasks/actions they did while in the jobs they have had. Show students the Using ReadWriteThink Notetaker to Draft Resumes handout and ask them to refer to their  Resume Action Words handout as they draft. Stress to students that they cannot save their work in this interactive tool.  
  • Using ReadWriteThink NoteTaker , they should include all major section headers and then list information within these. Emphasize to students that the resumes they create may have fewer items in the Work Experience section at this time because they are new to the job search. Instead of focusing on what experience they do not yet have, students should try to think about all the special skills or volunteer experiences they have had and include those.  
  • At the end of class, have students print their progress so far, as work cannot be saved with the ReadWriteThink NoteTaker .  
  • Students should continue drafting their resume sections at home, adding notes to the printout from the ReadWriteThink NoteTaker .  
  • Remind students that for the next session, they need to search newspapers, local career sites, Monster.com , or Careerbuilder.com for job listings that interest them. They need to bring three potential job listings to class with them for the next session.

Session Four

  • Ask students to get into their professional writing groups and share the job postings they brought to class. Have back issues of job listings on hand for students who do not come prepared; forgetful students can also engage through the additional listings group members brought.  
  • Students should describe their posting and share why they chose those job listings, what qualifications the jobs require, and for which they are most qualified at this time.  
  • Remind students of the importance of the job posting by referring to the activity from Session Two. Project a sample job listing that might appeal to the students in your classroom. Walk students through the parts of the posting, including the ways in which it describes the company or organization, the position, and the qualifications a person needs to have.  
  • Share with students the importance of addressing these items in their resumes as much as possible and provide examples of how students can do this based on the sample job listing you post.  
  • Remind students about the importance of audience in writing a resume and that the job posting essentially tells the writer what the audience/potential employer wants to see in the resume. Their task is to match their experiences to the listing, using language precisely and honestly.  
  • Place students back into their professional writing groups and ask them to review their job postings carefully, highlighting information that will be important for them to include. Ask students to find and highlight key words and ideas that their job postings state are important (for example, themes such as good communication skills, working as a team, good organization skills, etc.).  
  • At this point, ask students to choose the job posting that is best suited to their current experiences and most closely matches their interests and goals.  
  • Students should return to the printed resume drafts they created using ReadWriteThink NoteTaker and look for ways to blend the employer-desired skills with their own experiences. Encourage them to add action words and specific phrasing from the job posting and/or to include a section on special skills or activities they have that reflect what the employer wants. This will help them tailor their resumes to that audience. (Students may need additional help from the instructor in order to see how their experiences can be made to accommodate an employer's wording.)  
  • For the next session, students should have all major sections of their resume completed (including bulleted action items) using the draft from ReadWriteThink NoteTaker . They should bring them to class along with their printed job description.

Session Five

  • Students should get out their printed sections of their resume and bulleted action lists as created in ReadWriteThink NoteTaker . In their professional writing groups, students will exchange their resume draft notes and their job posting with the others. Students will review each group member's resume draft notes, asking questions that will help their classmate revise. Use the Resume Peer Review Guide to facilitate this process.  
  • Give students time on the computers to work with their resume notes in a word processing program such as Microsoft Word. Students may choose to use a resume template available on Word, or they may choose to create their own format for their resumes. Teachers may need to spend time showing students how to use templates or help them create a resume format without a template.  
  • As students revise and organize this draft of their resumes, the teacher should move around the room, conferring with them individually about the changes they are making and asking them to describe how their resume is tailored to their professional audience.  
  • For the next session, students should complete typing their resumes and bring a printed copy to class for a visual analysis day.

Session Six

  • Begin the class by asking students to freewrite for five minutes, reflecting on their experience so far drafting their resumes, finding a job posting, and tailoring their resume to that job.  
  • Following that, ask them to find a partner who is not from their professional writing group and share with that student the experiences they wrote about. Each student should ask their partner at least two questions about their experiences. Students should write these questions down on their freewriting note pages and then respond to them in writing. These notes will be used by students when they draft their Analyzing Your Writing Process Assignment to accompany their final resume.  
  • Bring the class back together and begin a discussion about the visual design aspect of resumes. Reconnect with students' earlier comments about how resumes are different from other types of writing. It may be helpful to refer to the list students made in Session One .  
  • Discuss the importance of the visual layout of resumes and how the look of a resume works in conjunction with its purpose, to provide employers a quick impression of the author and his/her ability to perform the duties and succeed in the job. Also discuss how students can make their own resumes stand out while still working within traditional resume format guidelines.  
  • Ask students to return to various resume resources, including books, articles, or online sites and find two additional resume writing sites and gather ideas about the visual presentation of resumes. Refer them to the Suggested Online Student Resume Resources if necessary. After reviewing this information, students should return to their professional writing groups with at least three ideas for how to design the layout of their own resumes.  
  • Bring the class back together and ask students to share what they learned about the visual design of resumes. Ask other students to act as recorders for the class.  
  • Give students time to return to the computers and work on the design of their resumes using what they learned from the class discussion.  
  • At the end of the session, introduce the Analyzing Your Writing Process Assignment , telling students that in addition to submitting their finished professional resumes and job postings, they will also write a reflective essay documenting their writing process and explain what they learned about creating a professional resume . See the Analyzing Your Writing Process Assignment . This assignment should be completed after the presentation.  
  • For the next session, students should bring their completed resumes to class.

Session Seven

  • Students should take out their finished resumes. Allow students about 5 minutes to review their resume so that the information is fresh in their minds for their presentation to the class.  
  • Each student will come to the front of the class and share his/her resume, describing his/her process for creating it, what job it is tailored for and how it is tailored for that job, what he/she likes about the resume, and how he/she might continue to revise it. (The student should be able to show the resume to the class using a computer [for an electronic version], a document camera [paper version], or an overhead projector [transparency version]. If only an overhead is available, the teacher may need to allow extra time for preparing resumes as overheads to show the class.)  
  • Following each student's presentation, the class will be allowed time to ask the presenter any questions and present their suggestions for revision. The number of days devoted to presentations will depend on the size of the class.  
  • Remind students to complete the Analyzing Your Writing Process Assignment for submission at the next class meeting.
  • This lesson can be extended and enhanced by inviting local business owners or human resource representatives to the classroom to discuss their experiences in writing job listings and reading/reviewing resumes.
  • Partner with other teachers or departments in your school and arrange a job fair in your gymnasium or auditorium. Invite local businesses to send representatives to serve as resume reviewers and mock interviewers.
  • This lesson can be extended to include more time spent on resume design, including designing scannable resumes.
  • Some entry-level jobs require the completion of an application but not the submission of a resume. Acquire applications for jobs in your area and share these with students, noting how having their resume makes for easy completion of most applications. Further stress how the resume writing process prepares students for interviews by getting them to think about their experiences, skills, and strengths.  
  • Students can visit these Web resources to learn more about writing a resume: Writing Your First Resume , General Technical Writing Guidelines , Monster.com Student Resume Tips , and Resumes—What Not to Do .

Student Assessment / Reflections

  • Make sure that students are making adequate progress on the project by checking work completed at the end of each session and offering additional guidance or support when necessary.
  • Use the sample Professional Resume Rubric to assess finished resumes and reflections.
  • Calendar Activities
  • Professional Library
  • Student Interactives

Students examine the different ways that they write and think about the role writing plays in life.

Useful for a wide variety of reading and writing activities, this outlining tool allows students to organize up to five levels of information.

This tool guides students through the creation of a resume that can be saved and edited. Written and audio tips provide extra support.

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On the job hunt (writing a CV)

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Writing a CV

writing a CV in English

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LESSON OVERVIEW

In this lesson, students watch a video about writing a CV in English, have a closer look at a CV sample and write parts of their CVs .  

VIDEO AND DISCUSSION

The lesson starts with a warm-up in which students talk about writing a CV. They decide whether certain elements should be included in CVs (e.g. your photo, your date of birth, your hobbies). There are no incorrect answers in this task but students need to explain why they would include some elements and not others. Then, students do a vocabulary task . They need to match five statements with their follow-ups. The context for the target vocabulary ( template, bullet points, chronological order , etc.) is provided. If the teacher thinks it’s necessary, they might ask students to explain the target vocabulary after they have finished the task. Next, students discuss some questions about writing a CV in English and other languages. They also share their experience with online CV writing tips.

WRITING A CV IN ENGLISH

Students watch the first part of the video and match three types of CVs with their descriptions. While they watch the second part of the video, they decide whether five sentences are true or false . They also need to correct the false sentences . After the video, students answer some questions about writing a CV in English using the information they’ve learned from the video. Next, students read a CV and answer some questions about it. They decide whether the author followed the rules from the video and talk about the skills listed in the CV. Then, students read the CV objective again and complete some notes about it. Their next task is to complete some notes about themselves and write a CV objective . Finally, students look at the work experience described in the CV and use the verbs included there to create some collocations . They also decide which of the verbs they will use while writing a CV in English. In the last task, students need to use the verbs to write about their work experience . As homework, students can use the parts of CV they wrote in the class to create their own complete CV in English .

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Another practical and great lesson plan for professional contexts! As an ESL teacher, we are encouraged to assist our non-native speaker students to do something actionable in their professional life. Thanks for the plan. Happy New Year!

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I’m glad to hear the lesson is useful. Happy New Year to you, too 🙂

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Really useful!

Great! Thanks!

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Writing A Resume Lesson Plan

Writing A Resume

Students practice the skill of writing a resume that reflects professional presentation. They use a worksheet that is used for writing guidelines. The tool is effective for the scaffolding of different ability levels. Then students transfer the data into a resume.

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Lesson Plan for Writing a Resume

  • Categories : High school english lesson plans grades 9 12
  • Tags : High school lesson plans & tips

Lesson Plan for Writing a Resume

I try to be a source of inspiration for my students. In the rural area where I teach, a lot of my students can’t imagine themselves doing anything spectacular with their lives and many seem content to seek mediocrity rather than greatness. My job as their educator is to inspire them to climb mountains, both literally and figuratively. Every year my students create a resume where they must identify specific goals and the methods they intend to employ to reach said goals.

Inspire Your Students

It is important to set a good example in your classroom and show your students that you not only believe what you are telling them, but that you yourself have done what you are asking them to do. The other day I was speaking with my juniors about Europe and I mentioned the last time I was in Paris. Someone raised his hand and said, “Mrs. T, you are unlike anyone I’ve ever known, you actually do the things you say you are going to. No one I know ever fulfills his dreams.” I told him the difference between me and whomever he is talking about is not that I could do it and they couldn’t, but that instead of simply talking about doing it, I did it. Something as simple and straightforward as that can blow the minds of children used to living amongst naysayers. Be a positive influence in your students’ lives and you will teach them to believe in themselves.

Before taking my students to the computer lab, I tell them to clear their minds and give me their attention. I want them to think about the endless possibilities that fill this world of ours. I direct their eyes to the poster next to my white board with the heading “You never know what you can do until you try.” Underneath that heading is a picture of a skydiver. I ask them look a little closer at the picture to see if they notice something. This is when my astute observers incredulously ask, “Mrs. T is that you?!” Several years ago I went sky diving and I enlarged the photo of myself and pasted it over the picture on the poster. I tell them it is me and that if I can jump out of a plane, they can think outside the box and imagine the infinite amount of opportunities they have.

Now I’ve lit a fire, and I need to fan the flames. I give them the handout below along with instructions regarding Microsoft Word for those students who are not familiar with it. This resume isn’t just a list of their accomplishments thus far – it is also a proposal for who they will become.

Include with the following directions for your students a sample resume for them to use.

Resume Instructions

Directions: You will create two resumes this week. One will be for use in future and present endeavors, the other will be a reflective resume to help you focus on long-term goals. Both will be completed for a grade for this class. Use Microsoft Word templates to build a resume. Your resume should be properly formatted, proofread, and without error.

This process should help you learn more about yourself and what you have to offer, and should also help you in the future when you begin distributing resumes to universities and potential employers. A resume helps you present your accomplishments, talents, and skills.

Create your own reflective resume. The purpose of this assignment is to pinpoint both your achievements and your goals. Think about which skills you have and which ones you need to further develop. What are your long-term goals? What skills will you need to achieve those goals?

writing a resume lesson plan

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Lesson Plan: Resume Writing - IT

Description.

This lesson explores the importance of and the components of resumes. Students will evaluate their existing resumes and create a new personal resume.

Download the lesson plan

Scroll to the related items section at the bottom of this page for additional resources.

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COMMENTS

  1. Lesson Plan: Resume Writing for Teens

    In this lesson, students will develop a resume, write business correspondence, complete a sample job application, and explain the protocol for selecting and using appropriate references for job applications. Download the lesson plan. Scroll to the related items section at the bottom of this page for additional resources.

  2. PDF 7.1 Resume Writing Lesson Plan

    Close the resume examples and maximize the 7.2 Resume Writing Presentation. As you continue through the presentation, point out how the various resume writing strategies below are used in the example resumes that students should be looking at in their Student Manual. Resume Writing Strategies . CONTENT or "How to Write a Resume" • Be concise

  3. PDF Lesson Plan 4 RESUME WRITING

    A.2. Analyze skills and abilities required in a variety of career options and relate them to their own skills and abilities. B.1. Use a career planning process that includes self-assessment, personal development, and a career portfolio as a way to gain initial entry into the workplace. B.2.

  4. PDF How to build a standout resume lesson for grades 9-12

    This 60-minute lesson plan has everything you need to teach your students resume-writing skills so they can write resumes that grab employers' attention and, most importantly, lead to interviews. It includes materials, learning objectives and standards, activities and instructions, and student handouts. We also recommend tech tools that you ...

  5. How to build a standout resume lesson

    Pick an activity. Pick one activity to do in a single class period or do all three across multiple classes. Each is around 30 minutes and designed to stand on its own—but they also work well together! Understanding your audience jigsaw. Students will work together to prepare a resume based on a fictional profile.

  6. Resumes and Cover Letters for High School Students

    Resume Generator: This ReadWriteThink resource takes students through the process of creating a resume one step at a time. Letter Generator: This ReadWriteThink resource helps students create a professional cover letter. Sample High School Resumes and Cover Letters: These realistic resumes and cover letters help students visualize and generate ...

  7. PDF The Resume Workbook For High School Students

    This workbook is designed to be consistent with the resume writing strategies presented in Yana Parker's other publications: • Damn Good Resume Guide • The Resume Catalog • Ready-To-Go Resumes — Software/Templates • Blue Collar and Beyond: Resumes for Skilled Trades and Services These four books are available from Ten Speed Press.

  8. Resume Writing Lesson Plan

    This lesson plan teaches 11th and 12th grade students how to write a resume over two class periods. On the first day, students analyze good and bad resume examples and learn the components of an effective resume. On the second day, students create their own resume using a template and criteria. Activities include brainstorming reasons for a resume, writing their own resume, and peer reviewing ...

  9. PDF LESSON PLAN

    ask students to take notes about resumes. A resume is a written account of someone's educational, personal, and professional qualifications and experiences for a job or position. Resume writing tips: • Limit your resume to one page. While it's sometimes okay to have a two- page resume, most employers request a one-page resume.

  10. Help Wanted: Writing Professional Resumes

    The process of creating a resume asks students to begin envisioning themselves as professionals and calls upon them to understand a new audience for their writing: employers and other business professionals (see Dean 55-61). In her book Genre Theory: Teaching, Writing, Being, NCTE author and consultant Deborah Dean notes the need for educators ...

  11. PDF Résumé Writing Branding Yourself Lesson 1: High School

    Tying It All Together: This is the first part of a three-day lesson on résumé writing. The teacher should make sure students understand that this lesson is the first of three and that they will be writing résumés as the days progress. If this lesson is taught in an English class, the teacher might relate it to some business classes.

  12. Lesson Plan: Show Yourself Off

    In this lesson, students will create personal resume to use when searching for a job and differentiate between chronological and functional resume. Download the lesson plan. Scroll to the related items section at the bottom of this page for additional resources.

  13. How to teach resume writing to your high school students

    Even though you might not need to update your resume, it's a great exercise that will help you better understand the process and allow your students to see an "expert" model revision. 3. Scaffold the writing process with mini-lessons & a resume outline. Resume outline: Students drafted and revised on a Google doc.

  14. PDF Résumé Checklist Handout

    4. Using the Résumé Checklist, list the major components of your résumé. Mark out any components you wish to omit from your résumé. Organize your personal information in chronological order, functional, or other appropriate form. 5. Write an objective for your résumé.

  15. PDF Resumes Part 1

    In this 2-day lesson, students will organize information about themselves that pertain to a resume, generate a high school level resume, and have it peer reviewed. Using CareerVillage, Students will then ask professionals questions regarding what types of skills or experiences may be helpful when applying for a position of the students choosing.

  16. On the job hunt (writing a CV)

    VIDEO AND DISCUSSION. The lesson starts with a warm-up in which students talk about writing a CV. They decide whether certain elements should be included in CVs (e.g. your photo, your date of birth, your hobbies). There are no incorrect answers in this task but students need to explain why they would include some elements and not others.

  17. PDF South Dakota Career Advisors Lesson Plan Resume and Master Applications

    At this age most students have been exposed to resumes and the very minimal basics. This lesson will help with the basics and put a focus on the two hardest parts of resumes; objective field and skills. 1. Give students " Pocket Resume" to lay out the basic information that goes on resume and have them start filling this out:

  18. Writing A Resume Lesson Plan for 11th

    This Writing A Resume Lesson Plan is suitable for 11th - Higher Ed. Students practice the skill of writing a resume that reflects professional presentation. They use a worksheet that is used for writing guidelines.

  19. Lesson Plan for Writing a Resume

    This lesson plan highlights ways that you can use the accomplishments you've made in your own life to inspire the lives of your students. High school students today need to learn practical skills that will help them in the future. Teaching them to write their own resume is one way educators can better prepare their students for the employment market.

  20. Lesson Plan: Show Yourself Off

    In this lesson, students will create personal resumes to use when searching for a job. Download the lesson plan. Scroll to the related items section at the bottom of this page for additional resources.

  21. Writing a resume lesson plan

    This works great as an end-of-year unit, especially if students are interested in getting a summer job! A professional writing or business writing unit plan for high school students contains 7 detailed Lesson Plans with accompanying PowerPoints on resume and cover letter writing and writing emails. This is very practical unit for students to learn real world related writing skills and it is ...

  22. Lesson Plan: Resume Writing

    This lesson explores the importance of and the components of resumes. Students will evaluate their existing resumes and create a new personal resume. Download the lesson plan. Scroll to the related items section at the bottom of this page for additional resources.

  23. Welcome to the Purdue Online Writing Lab

    The Online Writing Lab at Purdue University houses writing resources and instructional material, and we provide these as a free service of the Writing Lab at Purdue. Students, members of the community, and users worldwide will find information to assist with many writing projects. Teachers and trainers may use this material for in-class and out ...

  24. Resume -Lesson-Planning

    [ SAMPLE RESUME ] JESSICA NADEAU. 42 Washington Avenue Auburn, Maine 04240 (207) 555- jnadeau@internet. Career Objective: Computer support technician in central Maine Education: High School Diploma, June 2002 Edward Little High School G.P. 3 Class Rank: 45 out of 411 Honors and Awards: Honor Roll for last three semesters Perfect Attendance Award for the last two academic years

  25. Writing a Skills-Based Resume: Template & Examples

    It is important for job seekers to showcase the skills that hiring managers seek to demonstrate their fit for the job. My Perfect Resume's sampling of 25,000 resumes from 2023 found that the following skills were the most frequently listed by job seekers: Time management. Customer service. Critical thinking.