Skills classification in resume [closed]

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I need help how to classify skills in resume and is this correct :



Strong
iOS : Objective-C, swift.

Familiar
PHP, C#, ASP.net MVC, JAVA.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch


Update :



Language
- Extensive experience in Objective-C and swift.
- Familiar with PHP, C# and JAVA

Frameworks
Cocoa Touch, Laravel and ASP.net MVC.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch






share|improve this question














closed as primarily opinion-based by David K, keshlam, Dawny33, gnat, Kent A. Nov 7 '15 at 20:30


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 3




    That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
    – keshlam
    Nov 6 '15 at 21:24










  • Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 19:28










  • @djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:17






  • 1




    You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:47










  • @djechlin check my update please.
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56
















up vote
-2
down vote

favorite












I need help how to classify skills in resume and is this correct :



Strong
iOS : Objective-C, swift.

Familiar
PHP, C#, ASP.net MVC, JAVA.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch


Update :



Language
- Extensive experience in Objective-C and swift.
- Familiar with PHP, C# and JAVA

Frameworks
Cocoa Touch, Laravel and ASP.net MVC.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch






share|improve this question














closed as primarily opinion-based by David K, keshlam, Dawny33, gnat, Kent A. Nov 7 '15 at 20:30


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 3




    That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
    – keshlam
    Nov 6 '15 at 21:24










  • Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 19:28










  • @djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:17






  • 1




    You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:47










  • @djechlin check my update please.
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56












up vote
-2
down vote

favorite









up vote
-2
down vote

favorite











I need help how to classify skills in resume and is this correct :



Strong
iOS : Objective-C, swift.

Familiar
PHP, C#, ASP.net MVC, JAVA.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch


Update :



Language
- Extensive experience in Objective-C and swift.
- Familiar with PHP, C# and JAVA

Frameworks
Cocoa Touch, Laravel and ASP.net MVC.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch






share|improve this question














I need help how to classify skills in resume and is this correct :



Strong
iOS : Objective-C, swift.

Familiar
PHP, C#, ASP.net MVC, JAVA.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch


Update :



Language
- Extensive experience in Objective-C and swift.
- Familiar with PHP, C# and JAVA

Frameworks
Cocoa Touch, Laravel and ASP.net MVC.

Other
Git, JSON, Rest API, UML, Sql, SCRUM, Sketch








share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 7 '15 at 20:55

























asked Nov 6 '15 at 20:33









Chlebta

1004




1004




closed as primarily opinion-based by David K, keshlam, Dawny33, gnat, Kent A. Nov 7 '15 at 20:30


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as primarily opinion-based by David K, keshlam, Dawny33, gnat, Kent A. Nov 7 '15 at 20:30


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 3




    That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
    – keshlam
    Nov 6 '15 at 21:24










  • Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 19:28










  • @djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:17






  • 1




    You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:47










  • @djechlin check my update please.
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56












  • 3




    That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
    – keshlam
    Nov 6 '15 at 21:24










  • Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 19:28










  • @djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:17






  • 1




    You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
    – user42272
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:47










  • @djechlin check my update please.
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56







3




3




That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
– keshlam
Nov 6 '15 at 21:24




That's as good a system as any other. In the expedience section you can go into more details about what kinds of things you've done with which languages and platforms.
– keshlam
Nov 6 '15 at 21:24












Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
– user42272
Nov 7 '15 at 19:28




Why are you listing skills you aren't even familiar with on a resume? You may as well include several dead languages (Ancient Greek COBOL etc.) to spice things up.
– user42272
Nov 7 '15 at 19:28












@djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
– Chlebta
Nov 7 '15 at 20:17




@djechlin which skills you are talking about ? All skills I've included I've used it in more then 3 project at least so do you think I'm not fimiliar with ?
– Chlebta
Nov 7 '15 at 20:17




1




1




You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
– user42272
Nov 7 '15 at 20:47




You have a "Familiar" section. It is followed by an "Other" section. It stands to reason that the skills under "Other" you are not "Familiar" with.
– user42272
Nov 7 '15 at 20:47












@djechlin check my update please.
– Chlebta
Nov 7 '15 at 20:56




@djechlin check my update please.
– Chlebta
Nov 7 '15 at 20:56










2 Answers
2






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up vote
1
down vote













This may vary by employer, but if I saw that on a resume I would have no idea what you meant by it and so the CV would go on the reject pile.



I would suggest something like:



  • Extensive experience in Objective-C etc

  • Familiar with PHP etc

and regarding your final category, I would either leave it out altogether, or give some reason why it should be in, as an employer will look at those and think you don't have extensive experience with them and you are not familiar with them, so do you just know the name? So possibly:



  • Limited experience with JSON etc





share|improve this answer




















  • For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:30










  • check my update please
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56

















up vote
1
down vote













Bluntly, each category you have described is terrible.



Strong: Who do you think is going to believe your blanket assertion about yourself? That claim should be substantiated over projects you have completed and responsibilities you have held.



Familiar: I assume you are not familiar with these skills.



Other: I have no idea why you are listing skills on your resume that you are openly admitting you are not even familiar with.



Personally I don't include a skills section but I spell out all the technologies used in each project I discuss on my resume. If you insist, omit the "Other," don't separate "strong" and "familiar" and leave the rest of your resume to substantiate which skills are strong. Only include a language if you can write a "hello world" on a whiteboard and answer the question "So what's something you wrote in it?"






share|improve this answer



























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    1
    down vote













    This may vary by employer, but if I saw that on a resume I would have no idea what you meant by it and so the CV would go on the reject pile.



    I would suggest something like:



    • Extensive experience in Objective-C etc

    • Familiar with PHP etc

    and regarding your final category, I would either leave it out altogether, or give some reason why it should be in, as an employer will look at those and think you don't have extensive experience with them and you are not familiar with them, so do you just know the name? So possibly:



    • Limited experience with JSON etc





    share|improve this answer




















    • For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:30










    • check my update please
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:56














    up vote
    1
    down vote













    This may vary by employer, but if I saw that on a resume I would have no idea what you meant by it and so the CV would go on the reject pile.



    I would suggest something like:



    • Extensive experience in Objective-C etc

    • Familiar with PHP etc

    and regarding your final category, I would either leave it out altogether, or give some reason why it should be in, as an employer will look at those and think you don't have extensive experience with them and you are not familiar with them, so do you just know the name? So possibly:



    • Limited experience with JSON etc





    share|improve this answer




















    • For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:30










    • check my update please
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:56












    up vote
    1
    down vote










    up vote
    1
    down vote









    This may vary by employer, but if I saw that on a resume I would have no idea what you meant by it and so the CV would go on the reject pile.



    I would suggest something like:



    • Extensive experience in Objective-C etc

    • Familiar with PHP etc

    and regarding your final category, I would either leave it out altogether, or give some reason why it should be in, as an employer will look at those and think you don't have extensive experience with them and you are not familiar with them, so do you just know the name? So possibly:



    • Limited experience with JSON etc





    share|improve this answer












    This may vary by employer, but if I saw that on a resume I would have no idea what you meant by it and so the CV would go on the reject pile.



    I would suggest something like:



    • Extensive experience in Objective-C etc

    • Familiar with PHP etc

    and regarding your final category, I would either leave it out altogether, or give some reason why it should be in, as an employer will look at those and think you don't have extensive experience with them and you are not familiar with them, so do you just know the name? So possibly:



    • Limited experience with JSON etc






    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Nov 7 '15 at 18:32









    Rory Alsop

    5,55712340




    5,55712340











    • For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:30










    • check my update please
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:56
















    • For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:30










    • check my update please
      – Chlebta
      Nov 7 '15 at 20:56















    For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:30




    For the final category it's not classification based on knowledge level because JSON, UML or Rest API ... can be used with any language. I meant that I've good experience with those tools
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:30












    check my update please
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56




    check my update please
    – Chlebta
    Nov 7 '15 at 20:56












    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Bluntly, each category you have described is terrible.



    Strong: Who do you think is going to believe your blanket assertion about yourself? That claim should be substantiated over projects you have completed and responsibilities you have held.



    Familiar: I assume you are not familiar with these skills.



    Other: I have no idea why you are listing skills on your resume that you are openly admitting you are not even familiar with.



    Personally I don't include a skills section but I spell out all the technologies used in each project I discuss on my resume. If you insist, omit the "Other," don't separate "strong" and "familiar" and leave the rest of your resume to substantiate which skills are strong. Only include a language if you can write a "hello world" on a whiteboard and answer the question "So what's something you wrote in it?"






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Bluntly, each category you have described is terrible.



      Strong: Who do you think is going to believe your blanket assertion about yourself? That claim should be substantiated over projects you have completed and responsibilities you have held.



      Familiar: I assume you are not familiar with these skills.



      Other: I have no idea why you are listing skills on your resume that you are openly admitting you are not even familiar with.



      Personally I don't include a skills section but I spell out all the technologies used in each project I discuss on my resume. If you insist, omit the "Other," don't separate "strong" and "familiar" and leave the rest of your resume to substantiate which skills are strong. Only include a language if you can write a "hello world" on a whiteboard and answer the question "So what's something you wrote in it?"






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        Bluntly, each category you have described is terrible.



        Strong: Who do you think is going to believe your blanket assertion about yourself? That claim should be substantiated over projects you have completed and responsibilities you have held.



        Familiar: I assume you are not familiar with these skills.



        Other: I have no idea why you are listing skills on your resume that you are openly admitting you are not even familiar with.



        Personally I don't include a skills section but I spell out all the technologies used in each project I discuss on my resume. If you insist, omit the "Other," don't separate "strong" and "familiar" and leave the rest of your resume to substantiate which skills are strong. Only include a language if you can write a "hello world" on a whiteboard and answer the question "So what's something you wrote in it?"






        share|improve this answer












        Bluntly, each category you have described is terrible.



        Strong: Who do you think is going to believe your blanket assertion about yourself? That claim should be substantiated over projects you have completed and responsibilities you have held.



        Familiar: I assume you are not familiar with these skills.



        Other: I have no idea why you are listing skills on your resume that you are openly admitting you are not even familiar with.



        Personally I don't include a skills section but I spell out all the technologies used in each project I discuss on my resume. If you insist, omit the "Other," don't separate "strong" and "familiar" and leave the rest of your resume to substantiate which skills are strong. Only include a language if you can write a "hello world" on a whiteboard and answer the question "So what's something you wrote in it?"







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 7 '15 at 19:34







        user42272



















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