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E-raamat: English for Academic CVs, Resumes, and Online Profiles

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: English for Academic Research
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030110901
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: English for Academic Research
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030110901

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Are you a graduate, postgraduate or PhD student?  Building a CV or profile can be difficult for anyone, but especially for those whose first language is not English.  This book is essential for those looking to promote themselves in the academic community, and can be used both for self-study, as well as in an English for Academic Purposes (EAP) course.  The book contains tips, do's and dont's, and discussion points that can be used by instructors.





Based on interviews with recruiters and an analysis of hundreds of CVs from around 40 different countries, the book is structured as a series of FAQs. Topics covered include:









how recruiters and HR people analyse a CV whether using a template is a good idea how to present your personal details and whether to include a photo how to write an Objective and a personal profile what to write in each section (Education, Work Experience, Skills, Personal Interests) how to highlight your language, communication and team skills how to get and write references

The last chapter of the book contains a simple template to help you get the job of your dreams!





Other books in this series include:





English for Writing Research Papers





English for Research: Usage, Style, and Grammar





English for Presentations at International Conferences





English for Academic Research: Grammar / Vocabulary / Writing Exercises





English for Academic Correspondence





English for Interacting on Campus





Adrian Wallwork is the author of over 40 books aimed at helping non-native English speakers to communicate more effectively in English. He has published with SpringerNature, Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Scholastic, BEP and the BBC.
1 Preliminaries - thinking about the type of job you want 1(12)
1.1 What's the buzz?
2(3)
1.2 What is the purpose of a CV/resume?
5(1)
1.3 What are research institutes really looking for? And companies?
6(2)
1.4 Is it a good idea to send the same CV to different companies/institutes?
8(1)
1.5 Do I need to be honest?
8(1)
1.6 Will recruiters access my Facebook, Instagram and Twitter accounts?
9(1)
1.7 Should I used LinkedIn?
9(1)
1.8 Should I consider a video CV?
10(1)
1.9 Is it a good idea to have my CV on my personal website?
11(2)
2 Templates and Recruiters 13(20)
2.1 What's the buzz?
14(2)
2.2 How many pages should a CV be?
16(1)
2.3 What is the typical order of information in a CV?
16(1)
2.4 What is a template? Should I use one?
17(1)
2.5 How fast do recruiters read CVs? Do all recruiters read CVs in the same way?
18(2)
2.6 Isn't the information contained in my CV more important to a recruiter than the layout?
20(1)
2.7 How can I help recruiters understand what the most important fr information is on CV?
20(1)
2.8 How does a LinkedIn page differ from a traditional CV?
21(1)
2.9 What do potential employers want to see on my LinkedIn page?
?21
2.10 How do recruiters and HR use LinkedIn?
22(1)
2.11 Do recruitment agencies ask candidates to use a particular template?
22(1)
2.12 I want to be different. Should I create my own layout and style?
23(2)
2.13 What about spacing between lines, paragraphs and sections? And bullets? Fonts?
25(2)
2.14 What is the Europass? Why and how should I modify it?
27(2)
2.15 I have decided to use a template. What can I customize?
29(2)
2.16 Templates and Recruiters: Do's and Don'ts
31(2)
3 Personal Information 33(12)
3.1 What's the buzz?
34(2)
3.2 How should I write my name?
36(1)
3.3 Where should I write my name?
37(2)
3.4 Should I include a photograph?
39(1)
3.5 I have decided to include my photo. What kind of photo should I choose?
40(1)
3.6 What are the qualities of a good photograph?
40(1)
3.7 How should I write my date of birth?
41(1)
3.8 How 'professional' does my email address need to look?
41(1)
3.9 How should I present myself on LinkedIn?
42(1)
3.10 On LinkedIn, what should I put under 'Advice for contacting'?
42(1)
3.11 Personal information: Do's and Don'ts
43(2)
4 Objectives and Personal Profiles 45(20)
4.1 What's the buzz?
46(2)
4.2 What is an Objective?
48(1)
4.3 What should I write in my Objective?
49(1)
4.4 Is writing an Objective always a good idea?
50(1)
4.5 What is a personal profile/career summary? Where in my CV/resume should it be located?
50(1)
4.6 How should I structure my personal profile and what should it include
51(1)
4.7 What is the best format - one single paragraph or a series of bullet points?
52(3)
4.8 What tenses should I use in my personal profile?
55(1)
4.9 How can I make my statements sound more dynamic?
55(1)
4.10 How can I match my profile to the job specifications?
56(2)
4.11 How useful will my profile be for recruiters?
58(1)
4.12 What key words should I insert in my profiles and how can I insert them?
59(2)
4.13 How do I write a profile on LinkedIn, Academia and Research Gate?
61(1)
4.14 Where should I place my profile online?
62(1)
4.15 Objectives and Profiles: Do's and Don'ts
63(2)
5 Personal Statements, Bios, and Publications 65(18)
5.1 What's the buzz?
66(2)
5.2 What is a Personal Statement? What are the elements of a good Personal Statement?
68(4)
5.3 What is a motivational letter? What is a statement of interest?
72(1)
5.4 What is a bio? When would I need one?
73(1)
5.5 What is the structure of an extended bio?
74(2)
5.6 How do I write a bio for a home page?
76(1)
5.7 Can my academic biography include personal information and humor?
77(2)
5.8 How should I report my publications?
79(2)
5.9 Do's and Don'ts: Writing a Bio
81(2)
6 Education 83(12)
6.1 What's the buzz?
84(2)
6.2 Should I make my education and work experience look as if I have always been following a well-defined path?
86(1)
6.3 Where should the Education and Work sections be located?
86(1)
6.4 What is the typical layout?
87(1)
6.5 Which is better I developed a system or Developed a system (i.e. with or without the personal pronoun)?
88(1)
6.6 How should I write the date in the Work Experience and Education sections?
89(1)
6.7 I am not sure whether my degree has an equivalent outside my own country. What should I do?
90(2)
6.8 What about additional courses that I have attended?
92(1)
6.9 Education: Do's and Don'ts
93(2)
7 Work/Research Experience 95(14)
7.1 What's the buzz?
96(2)
7.2 How should I lay out the Work Experience section?
98(1)
7.3 Do I have to call this section Work Experience? Are there any other alternatives?
99(2)
7.4 How can I highlight how my work experience fits in with the post I am applying for? What key words should I try to insert?
101(1)
7.5 How can I make my key words stand out, yet not be too obtrusive?
102(1)
7.6 I am a recent graduate. My CV looks rather empty. What can I do to fill it up?
103(2)
7.7 Is it worth mentioning my teaching experience, even if it does not directly relate to the post I am applying for?
105(1)
7.8 How should I describe internships and other research experiences?
106(1)
7.9 I have done some jobs that don't seem to fit under the heading Work Experience, can I call them 'Other Work Experience'?
107(1)
7.10 Work Experience: Do's and Don'ts
108(1)
8 Technical and Soft Skills 109(10)
8.1 What's the buzz?
110(1)
8.2 How should I list my technical skills?
111(1)
8.3 Under what section should I put my language skills? And how do I mention them?
112(1)
8.4 Should I have a separate section entitled 'Communication Skills'?
113(2)
8.5 How should I talk about my personality and soft skills?
115(2)
8.6 How should I outline my skills in a resume?
117(1)
8.7 Skills: Do's and Don'ts
117(2)
9 Personal Interests 119(10)
9.1 What's the buzz?
120(1)
9.2 Under what heading should I put my hobbies and interests?
120(1)
9.3 Which, if any, of my hobbies and interests should I mention in my CV and my online profiles?
121(1)
9.4 What hobbies and interests should I avoid mentioning?
122(1)
9.5 How can I use my interests to provide evidence of my soft skills?
122(1)
9.6 Should I write a list or a short paragraph?
123(1)
9.7 What are the dangers of writing a paragraph?
124(2)
9.8 Are there any other tricks for gaining the hirer's attention through my Personal Interests section?
126(1)
9.9 How should I talk about my interests on LinkedIn?
127(1)
9.10 I don't have any Honors & Awards. Is it a problem?
127(1)
9.11 What about Volunteer Experience and Causes?
127(1)
9.12 Personal Interests: Do's and Don'ts
127(2)
10 References and Reference Letters 129(20)
10.1 What's the buzz?
130(2)
10.2 Do I need to provide the names of referees on my CV?
132(1)
10.3 Where should I put my referees on my CV?
133(1)
10.4 Will HR people and recruiters contact my referees?
134(1)
10.5 What is a reference letter? How important is it?
134(1)
10.6 Who should I ask to write my reference letter? Can I write it myself?
135(1)
10.7 How should I ask someone to write a reference letter for me?
136(1)
10.8 How important is it for the reference letter to be written in good English?
137(1)
10.9 Example of a poorly written letter
138(1)
10.10 How should I structure my reference letter?
139(2)
10.11 Is it acceptable and ethical for me to write my own reference letters? What are the dangers?
141(2)
10.12 Is it OK for the reference letter to include negative information?
143(1)
10.13 Are there significant differences in style between the ways US and UK academics write reference letters?
144(1)
10.14 More examples of typical things mentioned in a reference letter
145(2)
10.15 How can I get and exploit recommendations on LinkedIn?
147(1)
10.16 References and reference letters: Do's and Don'ts
148(1)
11 Cover Letters 149(20)
11.1 What's the buzz?
150(1)
11.2 What is a cover letter? How important is it?
151(1)
11.3 What does the reader (HR person, secretary, professor) expect to find in a cover letter?
151(1)
11.4 What is the typical structure of a cover letter?
152(1)
11.5 How should I write a letter for a position in academia?
153(1)
11.6 How should I write a letter for a position in business?
154(1)
11.7 How should I apply for job that has not been advertised?
155(2)
11.8 How can I use LinkedIn members when applying for job that has not been advertised and where. I do not know anyone in the company/institute?
157(1)
11.9 What impression will hiring managers get if I use a template for my own cover letter?
157(2)
11.10 Using my cover letter, how can I make it look as if I am perfect for the job advertised?
159(1)
11.11 What information do I not need to include in my cover letter?
159(2)
11.12 What are the dangers of writing an email cover letter?
161(1)
11.13 What should I write if I am simply making an enquiry about a possible job (i.e. no job has actually been advertised)?
162(1)
11.14 My cover letter does not fit on one page, what can I leave out?
162(1)
11.15 What does a good cover look like?
162(4)
11.16 Cover Letters: Do's and Don'ts
166(3)
12 Checking your English and more 169(14)
12.1 What's the buzz?
170(2)
12.2 How important are my CV, cover letter and other such documents?
172(1)
12.3 How important is the reader's first impression?
173(1)
12.4 Am I likely to be a good judge of how accurate, appropriate and effective my CV and cover letter are?
174(2)
12.5 How important is my English?
176(1)
12.6 How important is spelling in English?
176(1)
12.7 Can I use Google Translate to translate my CV and LinkedIn profile?
176(1)
12.8 What do I need to be careful about when translating from my language into English?
177(1)
12.9 Will I create a good impression if I use sophisticated grammar and complex sentence constructions?
178(1)
12.10 What final checks should I make before sending my CV/resume and the cover letter?
179(1)
12.11 On LinkedIn what final checks do I need to make?
179(1)
12.12 If they contact me for an interview, what should I write back?
180(1)
12.13 Checking your English and more... : Do's and Don't
181(2)
Appendix - Downloadable templates for CVs 183(6)
Keys to What's the buzz? exercises 189(6)
Sources for the Factoids 195(4)
Index 199
Adrian Wallwork is the co-founder of English for Academics (e4ac.com), which specializes in editing and revising scientific papers, as well as teaching English as a foreign language to PhD students. He is the author of over 30 textbooks for Springer Science+Business Media, Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, the BBC, and many other publishers. In 2019 he began marketing his self-published Discussion books for EFL teachers and students.