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Creating Effective CVs. Hints, Tips, & Examples. By Dr. Jennifer L. Bowie. What is in a name?. Curriculum Vita or Curriculum Vitae? Both are used Vita means “life’s course” (singular) Vitae means “life’s courses” (plural) or “life’s course” (singular, feminine)
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Creating Effective CVs Hints, Tips, & Examples By Dr. Jennifer L. Bowie
What is in a name? Curriculum Vita or Curriculum Vitae? • Both are used • Vita means “life’s course” (singular) • Vitae means “life’s courses” (plural) or “life’s course” (singular, feminine) • According to Webster: Vitae is the way to go
CV Vs. The Resume • CVs are for “faculty, research, clinical, or scientific position[s]” • CVs are more formal and longer • Resumes should be a page • CVs should be more than 2 pages • CVs include publications, presentations, professional activities, honors, and additional information, no objectives • There is no “set” format for a CV
Things to Include • Basic contact information • Educational background • Honors and awards • Teaching experience • Other employment experience if related • Publications (in bibliographic format) including • publications forthcoming • manuscripts under consideration • A brief description of your dissertation • Academic service • Professional memberships/Affiliations • List of references • Grants • Consulting • Volunteer Experience • Address where your dossier is available
CV Tips • People reading your vita usually grant it 20 seconds. There is no room for error: misspellings, contradictions, grammatical mistakes, awkward phrases, or chronological gaps. • The formatting should be clean and easy to read. • Highlight significant items by placing them strategically. • Do not pad your vita with trivial or irrelevant items. • Do not pass off one vita item for something more significant than it is. • Have a “master” CV with everything that you draw from to create the CVs you use • If you can: Don’t include all publications or presentations so you can list them as “selected” publications and “selected” presentations (only good if you have a lot, otherwise not worth it) • Length: Debatable, more than 2 and less than 6 (w/o references)
Setting up your CV: Part 1 • Start with name & contact info • Then education in reverse chronological order (most recent 1st) • Next dissertation info: title, committee, brief summary (<200 words) • Decide which is more important: • Publications & Presentations (for research jobs) • Teaching (for teaching jobs) • Both? Go with your strength, often Publications best
Setting up your CV: Publications & Presentations • Set up in MLA (or appropriate) format • List in reverse chronological • Include things under consideration or upcoming • Put your book reviews in a subcategory under Publications • If only doing a selective listing concentrate on items that reflect your academic/ research “focus” & what the job wants
Publications & Presentations Examples • Publications: “Student Problems with Hypertext and Webtext: A Student-Centered Hypertext Classroom?” Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 6.2 (2001). “From Blood Ties to Surrogate Involvement: Cornelius Suttree's Search For Happiness in McAnally Flatts” Under review September 2004 The Southern Quarterly. “Memento Mori,” Black Warrior Review, Vol. 27, No. 2, Summer 2001.
Publications & Presentations Examples “Considering Relationships, Differences, and Boundaries: Expanding and Empowering Technical Communication by Adopting Feminist Approaches.” Conference on College Composition and Communication; San Antonio, TX (March 2004). “The Sum of All Lesser Tales’: Cultural Myths and Social Conflicts in Cormac McCarthy’s Border Trilogy.” Western Literature AssociationConference. Rice University, Houston, TX. October 2003. “‘I Guess You Learn from Me’: Towards a More Reciprocal Relationship Between Doctoral Students and Graduate Faculty.” Presenter. Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) 2003 Convention, New York City. March 20. Session G24.
Setting up your CV: Teaching • Provide at least: • Place, title (TA, Instructor, whatever), course title, dates • Consider (especially if it is a teaching job): • Details on the class like material covered, genres, technology
Teaching Examples Literature English 2307 (Introduction to Fiction), 8 sections at Texas Tech University (2002-2003) First Year Composition English 1302 (Composition/Rhetoric II), 2 sections at Dallas County Community College (2004-present) Ball State University, Instructor (1998-Present). Undergraduate courses taught include computer-mediated, face-to-face, hybrid, and distance education basic writing, Composition I, Composition II, and Writing in the Disciplines (an upper-division history of writing technologies course).
Setting up your CV: Other items • Include the remaining items in the order that most qualifies you • Awards/Honors: include name of award, date received, info on award, and amount (if applicable) • Service: departmental, university & organizational • Include name of organization, title of position, dates & other important info
Setting up your CV: More other items • Professional Experience & Consulting (if applicable): • Include job title, place/org. and dates • If you need to add also include brief details • Affiliations: include name, abbreviation and dates • Computer Skills: if applicable • Editor & Administrate Roles: title, org., dates
Setting up your CV: More other items • References: • ALWAYS ask first • Include at least a teaching reference, a research reference, & the chair of your diss, and another (more are good, but not too many) • Include their name, title, and contact info
Design? • Design is always good, but a CV should not be a work of art • Use a simple, clean design • Use 1-2 fonts either serif or sans serif • If using 2 use one serif and one sans serif • Include white space!
Look at the examples: • Jennifer L. Bowie (me): Ph.D. in Tech Comm • Richard A. Rice: Ph.D. English, Concentration: Composition and Rhetoric Pedagogy, Specialty: Computers and Writing • Elizabeth Burmester: Ph.D. in English, Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Rhetoric