How does one list “full time and part time” on a resume?

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I was offered an internship many years back which turned into part-time work... in which I resumed full time work. Now, I'm working part-time again.



I do full time work during the summers, so I'm 4 months full, 8 months part-time.



This means I have many periods where my work hours vary - how do you list this on a resume?







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  • It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 4:24










  • @MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
    – Vaughan Hilts
    Jan 14 '14 at 16:23










  • Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 22:51
















up vote
3
down vote

favorite












I was offered an internship many years back which turned into part-time work... in which I resumed full time work. Now, I'm working part-time again.



I do full time work during the summers, so I'm 4 months full, 8 months part-time.



This means I have many periods where my work hours vary - how do you list this on a resume?







share|improve this question






















  • It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 4:24










  • @MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
    – Vaughan Hilts
    Jan 14 '14 at 16:23










  • Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 22:51












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite











I was offered an internship many years back which turned into part-time work... in which I resumed full time work. Now, I'm working part-time again.



I do full time work during the summers, so I'm 4 months full, 8 months part-time.



This means I have many periods where my work hours vary - how do you list this on a resume?







share|improve this question














I was offered an internship many years back which turned into part-time work... in which I resumed full time work. Now, I'm working part-time again.



I do full time work during the summers, so I'm 4 months full, 8 months part-time.



This means I have many periods where my work hours vary - how do you list this on a resume?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 14 '14 at 2:10

























asked Jan 14 '14 at 2:02









Vaughan Hilts

24539




24539











  • It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 4:24










  • @MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
    – Vaughan Hilts
    Jan 14 '14 at 16:23










  • Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 22:51
















  • It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 4:24










  • @MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
    – Vaughan Hilts
    Jan 14 '14 at 16:23










  • Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
    – Meredith Poor
    Jan 14 '14 at 22:51















It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
– Meredith Poor
Jan 14 '14 at 4:24




It's probably better just to describe the work you're doing and what you're accomplishing. Is your 'full time' really 'full time', or do you spend 3 hours a day on stuff that no employer would notice anyway? Sometimes a lower hour workweek isn't actually half as productive, you find that when you are working you're focused, and when you're not you have time to reflect on what you should be doing when you are.
– Meredith Poor
Jan 14 '14 at 4:24












@MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
– Vaughan Hilts
Jan 14 '14 at 16:23




@MeredithPoor I think it's a bit assumptions to say that. I work in software engineering -- so I was creating and developing software around the clock. During part-time, I'm more in bug fixing mode than architecting mode.
– Vaughan Hilts
Jan 14 '14 at 16:23












Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
– Meredith Poor
Jan 14 '14 at 22:51




Some software work is 'all out' - I've done plenty of that. Some occurs at a more measured pace, and you have time to think about what you're doing next. Hours != Product. One saying I used to hear but don't any more is that you can't employ 9 women to make a baby in 1 month. One's understanding of the problem they're trying to solve takes a certain amount of time to form, and it occurs somewhat independently of hours worked.
– Meredith Poor
Jan 14 '14 at 22:51










1 Answer
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For positions that weren't 100% full-time, add a note at the end of the description of the position:




(This position was held part-time.)



(This position was held full- and part-time.)




Your situation isn't unusual, and anyone wanting additional details will ask.






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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    For positions that weren't 100% full-time, add a note at the end of the description of the position:




    (This position was held part-time.)



    (This position was held full- and part-time.)




    Your situation isn't unusual, and anyone wanting additional details will ask.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      1
      down vote



      accepted










      For positions that weren't 100% full-time, add a note at the end of the description of the position:




      (This position was held part-time.)



      (This position was held full- and part-time.)




      Your situation isn't unusual, and anyone wanting additional details will ask.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted






        For positions that weren't 100% full-time, add a note at the end of the description of the position:




        (This position was held part-time.)



        (This position was held full- and part-time.)




        Your situation isn't unusual, and anyone wanting additional details will ask.






        share|improve this answer












        For positions that weren't 100% full-time, add a note at the end of the description of the position:




        (This position was held part-time.)



        (This position was held full- and part-time.)




        Your situation isn't unusual, and anyone wanting additional details will ask.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 14 '14 at 14:10









        Blrfl

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