Should I bring a resume to this meeting?
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I am a veteran student attending a Midwestern US university. One of the fraternities on campus has decided to seek a live in Resident Director from the veteran population, and has been coordinating with the University's Veteran Coordinator. I heard about the position from casual conversation with the Coordinator, who passed my contact info onto the fraternity's Chapter Counselor. In his email, the Counselor stated that the fraternity is in the "final stages" of a roles/responsiblities document and are interested in my input on it, and that the University organ responsible for the building and land are "soon to complete the scholarship/grant document." He closed the email by asking when I'm available to meet. There hasn't been a general dissemination of any job offer at the time I post this, and I know virtually nothing of what responsiblites the position would entail. Everything I do know is essentially hearsay. Should I treat the meeting like a job interview, modifying my resume to the general requirements of a typical Resident Director position, or leave that for a latter meeting? Or should I just email the guy back and ask him directly if I should bring one?
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I am a veteran student attending a Midwestern US university. One of the fraternities on campus has decided to seek a live in Resident Director from the veteran population, and has been coordinating with the University's Veteran Coordinator. I heard about the position from casual conversation with the Coordinator, who passed my contact info onto the fraternity's Chapter Counselor. In his email, the Counselor stated that the fraternity is in the "final stages" of a roles/responsiblities document and are interested in my input on it, and that the University organ responsible for the building and land are "soon to complete the scholarship/grant document." He closed the email by asking when I'm available to meet. There hasn't been a general dissemination of any job offer at the time I post this, and I know virtually nothing of what responsiblites the position would entail. Everything I do know is essentially hearsay. Should I treat the meeting like a job interview, modifying my resume to the general requirements of a typical Resident Director position, or leave that for a latter meeting? Or should I just email the guy back and ask him directly if I should bring one?
interviewing
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up vote
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up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I am a veteran student attending a Midwestern US university. One of the fraternities on campus has decided to seek a live in Resident Director from the veteran population, and has been coordinating with the University's Veteran Coordinator. I heard about the position from casual conversation with the Coordinator, who passed my contact info onto the fraternity's Chapter Counselor. In his email, the Counselor stated that the fraternity is in the "final stages" of a roles/responsiblities document and are interested in my input on it, and that the University organ responsible for the building and land are "soon to complete the scholarship/grant document." He closed the email by asking when I'm available to meet. There hasn't been a general dissemination of any job offer at the time I post this, and I know virtually nothing of what responsiblites the position would entail. Everything I do know is essentially hearsay. Should I treat the meeting like a job interview, modifying my resume to the general requirements of a typical Resident Director position, or leave that for a latter meeting? Or should I just email the guy back and ask him directly if I should bring one?
interviewing
New contributor
I am a veteran student attending a Midwestern US university. One of the fraternities on campus has decided to seek a live in Resident Director from the veteran population, and has been coordinating with the University's Veteran Coordinator. I heard about the position from casual conversation with the Coordinator, who passed my contact info onto the fraternity's Chapter Counselor. In his email, the Counselor stated that the fraternity is in the "final stages" of a roles/responsiblities document and are interested in my input on it, and that the University organ responsible for the building and land are "soon to complete the scholarship/grant document." He closed the email by asking when I'm available to meet. There hasn't been a general dissemination of any job offer at the time I post this, and I know virtually nothing of what responsiblites the position would entail. Everything I do know is essentially hearsay. Should I treat the meeting like a job interview, modifying my resume to the general requirements of a typical Resident Director position, or leave that for a latter meeting? Or should I just email the guy back and ask him directly if I should bring one?
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Dallium is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dallium is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dallium is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dallium is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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