What to include in a graduate's resume with zero employment history? [duplicate]

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  • What should a recent graduate list on a resume if they have no work experience?

    2 answers



I need advice in my situation.

I have graduated in 2012. Up to now I have zero employment history, but I wrote a set of meaningful programs.
This is not to demonstrate what I wrote, but to help you judge on the question

- Chat program (many-to-many users, send text, play a little game with peers)

- Reliable Speed reading program with many features.

- Program that uses database.

Etc.



I am thinking in two suggestions.
Am I right in any of these suggestions?



  • Don't mention "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


  • Mention that you have no "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


In general if "Programming experience" is good to insert into my resume, is it OK to add snapshots of my programs either within the resume paper or in a separate paper?



  • What is your suggestions and advice?






share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, CMW, jcmeloni, Ricketyship, mhoran_psprep Jan 27 '14 at 13:25


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
    – atk
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:07










  • @atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
    – Saleh Feek
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:31







  • 1




    Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
    – user10911
    Jan 26 '14 at 18:38
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1













This question already has an answer here:



  • What should a recent graduate list on a resume if they have no work experience?

    2 answers



I need advice in my situation.

I have graduated in 2012. Up to now I have zero employment history, but I wrote a set of meaningful programs.
This is not to demonstrate what I wrote, but to help you judge on the question

- Chat program (many-to-many users, send text, play a little game with peers)

- Reliable Speed reading program with many features.

- Program that uses database.

Etc.



I am thinking in two suggestions.
Am I right in any of these suggestions?



  • Don't mention "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


  • Mention that you have no "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


In general if "Programming experience" is good to insert into my resume, is it OK to add snapshots of my programs either within the resume paper or in a separate paper?



  • What is your suggestions and advice?






share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, CMW, jcmeloni, Ricketyship, mhoran_psprep Jan 27 '14 at 13:25


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
    – atk
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:07










  • @atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
    – Saleh Feek
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:31







  • 1




    Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
    – user10911
    Jan 26 '14 at 18:38












up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1






1






This question already has an answer here:



  • What should a recent graduate list on a resume if they have no work experience?

    2 answers



I need advice in my situation.

I have graduated in 2012. Up to now I have zero employment history, but I wrote a set of meaningful programs.
This is not to demonstrate what I wrote, but to help you judge on the question

- Chat program (many-to-many users, send text, play a little game with peers)

- Reliable Speed reading program with many features.

- Program that uses database.

Etc.



I am thinking in two suggestions.
Am I right in any of these suggestions?



  • Don't mention "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


  • Mention that you have no "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


In general if "Programming experience" is good to insert into my resume, is it OK to add snapshots of my programs either within the resume paper or in a separate paper?



  • What is your suggestions and advice?






share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • What should a recent graduate list on a resume if they have no work experience?

    2 answers



I need advice in my situation.

I have graduated in 2012. Up to now I have zero employment history, but I wrote a set of meaningful programs.
This is not to demonstrate what I wrote, but to help you judge on the question

- Chat program (many-to-many users, send text, play a little game with peers)

- Reliable Speed reading program with many features.

- Program that uses database.

Etc.



I am thinking in two suggestions.
Am I right in any of these suggestions?



  • Don't mention "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


  • Mention that you have no "Employment history" and just put "Programming experience" under which introduce the list of your programs.


In general if "Programming experience" is good to insert into my resume, is it OK to add snapshots of my programs either within the resume paper or in a separate paper?



  • What is your suggestions and advice?




This question already has an answer here:



  • What should a recent graduate list on a resume if they have no work experience?

    2 answers









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 27 '14 at 7:36









gnat

3,23473066




3,23473066










asked Jan 26 '14 at 16:50









Saleh Feek

1113




1113




marked as duplicate by gnat, CMW, jcmeloni, Ricketyship, mhoran_psprep Jan 27 '14 at 13:25


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by gnat, CMW, jcmeloni, Ricketyship, mhoran_psprep Jan 27 '14 at 13:25


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
    – atk
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:07










  • @atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
    – Saleh Feek
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:31







  • 1




    Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
    – user10911
    Jan 26 '14 at 18:38
















  • When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
    – atk
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:07










  • @atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
    – Saleh Feek
    Jan 26 '14 at 17:31







  • 1




    Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
    – user10911
    Jan 26 '14 at 18:38















When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
– atk
Jan 26 '14 at 17:07




When you say no employment history, do you mean 'no programming employment history' or nothing. Not even fast food service or a paper route'?
– atk
Jan 26 '14 at 17:07












@atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
– Saleh Feek
Jan 26 '14 at 17:31





@atk "no programming employment history", I worked unofficially at my father's fish farm and at my uncle's iron workshop, and at flagstones shop.
– Saleh Feek
Jan 26 '14 at 17:31





1




1




Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
– user10911
Jan 26 '14 at 18:38




Hi Saleh. I've removed that aside question. Please keep it to one question per question. You're welecome to ask it as a separate question.
– user10911
Jan 26 '14 at 18:38










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote













An employer is going to appreciate that as a graduate you're likely to not have any relevant employment history.



Including any work that you have done is still a good idea, as it shows that you're motivated and reliable.



For a 'Employment History' type section you can include:



  • Any work that you have done, even if it isn't relevant to the job you are applying for.

  • Any part time or summer jobs you might have had. You can put these in as a single section under 'Employment history'. Eg. "During my university summer breaks I worked picking apples. I supplemented my income during the year with various one-off odd jobs during the year - gardening, helping people move."

  • Any clubs or interest groups you attended.

  • Any sports you played.

  • Any projects you worked on in your own time.

Essentially you want to show the employer that you're a motivated and reliable individual.



However, this shouldn't be the major component of your CV. Rather focus on the relevant skills and experience you have.



So yes - Do include the jobs you've worked as, they show that you're reliable.



Listing the projects that you've been working sounds like an excellent idea, warranting its own section.






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    How many people used those meaningful programs? How well could you have a reference such as a professor discuss your ability to create such programs?



    I'd probably leave off the "No employment history" on the resume though I would mention this in a cover letter from the perspective that, "I'm eager to learn about developing software in a commercial environment," or something similar to show where you want to go.



    I'd probably suggest having a portfolio of your code that you bring to interviews rather than attaching it to the resume as there is the question of how well could someone that doesn't know the code easily see what it does, which patterns were used, what kinds of trade-offs did you decide in architecting the code the way you did.



    While you graduated in 2012, what have you done for the last couple of years? This is somewhat important as well as whether or not there was relevant course work in getting your degree that may be useful to put on the resume.



    A curriculum vitae is the same as a resume in an employment context.






    share|improve this answer



























      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      5
      down vote













      An employer is going to appreciate that as a graduate you're likely to not have any relevant employment history.



      Including any work that you have done is still a good idea, as it shows that you're motivated and reliable.



      For a 'Employment History' type section you can include:



      • Any work that you have done, even if it isn't relevant to the job you are applying for.

      • Any part time or summer jobs you might have had. You can put these in as a single section under 'Employment history'. Eg. "During my university summer breaks I worked picking apples. I supplemented my income during the year with various one-off odd jobs during the year - gardening, helping people move."

      • Any clubs or interest groups you attended.

      • Any sports you played.

      • Any projects you worked on in your own time.

      Essentially you want to show the employer that you're a motivated and reliable individual.



      However, this shouldn't be the major component of your CV. Rather focus on the relevant skills and experience you have.



      So yes - Do include the jobs you've worked as, they show that you're reliable.



      Listing the projects that you've been working sounds like an excellent idea, warranting its own section.






      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        5
        down vote













        An employer is going to appreciate that as a graduate you're likely to not have any relevant employment history.



        Including any work that you have done is still a good idea, as it shows that you're motivated and reliable.



        For a 'Employment History' type section you can include:



        • Any work that you have done, even if it isn't relevant to the job you are applying for.

        • Any part time or summer jobs you might have had. You can put these in as a single section under 'Employment history'. Eg. "During my university summer breaks I worked picking apples. I supplemented my income during the year with various one-off odd jobs during the year - gardening, helping people move."

        • Any clubs or interest groups you attended.

        • Any sports you played.

        • Any projects you worked on in your own time.

        Essentially you want to show the employer that you're a motivated and reliable individual.



        However, this shouldn't be the major component of your CV. Rather focus on the relevant skills and experience you have.



        So yes - Do include the jobs you've worked as, they show that you're reliable.



        Listing the projects that you've been working sounds like an excellent idea, warranting its own section.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          5
          down vote










          up vote
          5
          down vote









          An employer is going to appreciate that as a graduate you're likely to not have any relevant employment history.



          Including any work that you have done is still a good idea, as it shows that you're motivated and reliable.



          For a 'Employment History' type section you can include:



          • Any work that you have done, even if it isn't relevant to the job you are applying for.

          • Any part time or summer jobs you might have had. You can put these in as a single section under 'Employment history'. Eg. "During my university summer breaks I worked picking apples. I supplemented my income during the year with various one-off odd jobs during the year - gardening, helping people move."

          • Any clubs or interest groups you attended.

          • Any sports you played.

          • Any projects you worked on in your own time.

          Essentially you want to show the employer that you're a motivated and reliable individual.



          However, this shouldn't be the major component of your CV. Rather focus on the relevant skills and experience you have.



          So yes - Do include the jobs you've worked as, they show that you're reliable.



          Listing the projects that you've been working sounds like an excellent idea, warranting its own section.






          share|improve this answer














          An employer is going to appreciate that as a graduate you're likely to not have any relevant employment history.



          Including any work that you have done is still a good idea, as it shows that you're motivated and reliable.



          For a 'Employment History' type section you can include:



          • Any work that you have done, even if it isn't relevant to the job you are applying for.

          • Any part time or summer jobs you might have had. You can put these in as a single section under 'Employment history'. Eg. "During my university summer breaks I worked picking apples. I supplemented my income during the year with various one-off odd jobs during the year - gardening, helping people move."

          • Any clubs or interest groups you attended.

          • Any sports you played.

          • Any projects you worked on in your own time.

          Essentially you want to show the employer that you're a motivated and reliable individual.



          However, this shouldn't be the major component of your CV. Rather focus on the relevant skills and experience you have.



          So yes - Do include the jobs you've worked as, they show that you're reliable.



          Listing the projects that you've been working sounds like an excellent idea, warranting its own section.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 26 '14 at 22:12

























          answered Jan 26 '14 at 18:35







          user10911





























              up vote
              1
              down vote













              How many people used those meaningful programs? How well could you have a reference such as a professor discuss your ability to create such programs?



              I'd probably leave off the "No employment history" on the resume though I would mention this in a cover letter from the perspective that, "I'm eager to learn about developing software in a commercial environment," or something similar to show where you want to go.



              I'd probably suggest having a portfolio of your code that you bring to interviews rather than attaching it to the resume as there is the question of how well could someone that doesn't know the code easily see what it does, which patterns were used, what kinds of trade-offs did you decide in architecting the code the way you did.



              While you graduated in 2012, what have you done for the last couple of years? This is somewhat important as well as whether or not there was relevant course work in getting your degree that may be useful to put on the resume.



              A curriculum vitae is the same as a resume in an employment context.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                How many people used those meaningful programs? How well could you have a reference such as a professor discuss your ability to create such programs?



                I'd probably leave off the "No employment history" on the resume though I would mention this in a cover letter from the perspective that, "I'm eager to learn about developing software in a commercial environment," or something similar to show where you want to go.



                I'd probably suggest having a portfolio of your code that you bring to interviews rather than attaching it to the resume as there is the question of how well could someone that doesn't know the code easily see what it does, which patterns were used, what kinds of trade-offs did you decide in architecting the code the way you did.



                While you graduated in 2012, what have you done for the last couple of years? This is somewhat important as well as whether or not there was relevant course work in getting your degree that may be useful to put on the resume.



                A curriculum vitae is the same as a resume in an employment context.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  How many people used those meaningful programs? How well could you have a reference such as a professor discuss your ability to create such programs?



                  I'd probably leave off the "No employment history" on the resume though I would mention this in a cover letter from the perspective that, "I'm eager to learn about developing software in a commercial environment," or something similar to show where you want to go.



                  I'd probably suggest having a portfolio of your code that you bring to interviews rather than attaching it to the resume as there is the question of how well could someone that doesn't know the code easily see what it does, which patterns were used, what kinds of trade-offs did you decide in architecting the code the way you did.



                  While you graduated in 2012, what have you done for the last couple of years? This is somewhat important as well as whether or not there was relevant course work in getting your degree that may be useful to put on the resume.



                  A curriculum vitae is the same as a resume in an employment context.






                  share|improve this answer












                  How many people used those meaningful programs? How well could you have a reference such as a professor discuss your ability to create such programs?



                  I'd probably leave off the "No employment history" on the resume though I would mention this in a cover letter from the perspective that, "I'm eager to learn about developing software in a commercial environment," or something similar to show where you want to go.



                  I'd probably suggest having a portfolio of your code that you bring to interviews rather than attaching it to the resume as there is the question of how well could someone that doesn't know the code easily see what it does, which patterns were used, what kinds of trade-offs did you decide in architecting the code the way you did.



                  While you graduated in 2012, what have you done for the last couple of years? This is somewhat important as well as whether or not there was relevant course work in getting your degree that may be useful to put on the resume.



                  A curriculum vitae is the same as a resume in an employment context.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jan 26 '14 at 18:19









                  JB King

                  15.1k22957




                  15.1k22957












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