How to put education on your resume that you have not yet completed?
Currently on my resume for education I have the following:
University I went to Graduation date: Month, year
Bachelor of Science in Subject I studied GPA: 4.0
(note: the above has one line break for a total of two lines. If you're on mobile you might see it as multiple lines)
I'm currently about to start classes next term that will be pre requisites for a Master's program. I have not yet taken the GRE, or applied to the actual program (as without the pre-requisites I am ineligible flat out).
How should I put that I'm pursuing the MS? Currently I added to the last line
Master of Science in subject I will study - in progress
The chief reasons I want the MS to be on the resume in the first place are:
- So employers know that I am taking classes, and may need some slight flexibility in scheduling (a 9-6 won't quite be feasible)
- The jobs I'm looking at are Software development positions. My BS is in Industrial engineering (nothing to do with software) but the Master's is in Computer science. This should indicate that I know more than my education alone might give away (though relevant work experience listed elsewhere should also give that away).
resume education
|
show 3 more comments
Currently on my resume for education I have the following:
University I went to Graduation date: Month, year
Bachelor of Science in Subject I studied GPA: 4.0
(note: the above has one line break for a total of two lines. If you're on mobile you might see it as multiple lines)
I'm currently about to start classes next term that will be pre requisites for a Master's program. I have not yet taken the GRE, or applied to the actual program (as without the pre-requisites I am ineligible flat out).
How should I put that I'm pursuing the MS? Currently I added to the last line
Master of Science in subject I will study - in progress
The chief reasons I want the MS to be on the resume in the first place are:
- So employers know that I am taking classes, and may need some slight flexibility in scheduling (a 9-6 won't quite be feasible)
- The jobs I'm looking at are Software development positions. My BS is in Industrial engineering (nothing to do with software) but the Master's is in Computer science. This should indicate that I know more than my education alone might give away (though relevant work experience listed elsewhere should also give that away).
resume education
If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
5
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
4
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
2
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39
|
show 3 more comments
Currently on my resume for education I have the following:
University I went to Graduation date: Month, year
Bachelor of Science in Subject I studied GPA: 4.0
(note: the above has one line break for a total of two lines. If you're on mobile you might see it as multiple lines)
I'm currently about to start classes next term that will be pre requisites for a Master's program. I have not yet taken the GRE, or applied to the actual program (as without the pre-requisites I am ineligible flat out).
How should I put that I'm pursuing the MS? Currently I added to the last line
Master of Science in subject I will study - in progress
The chief reasons I want the MS to be on the resume in the first place are:
- So employers know that I am taking classes, and may need some slight flexibility in scheduling (a 9-6 won't quite be feasible)
- The jobs I'm looking at are Software development positions. My BS is in Industrial engineering (nothing to do with software) but the Master's is in Computer science. This should indicate that I know more than my education alone might give away (though relevant work experience listed elsewhere should also give that away).
resume education
Currently on my resume for education I have the following:
University I went to Graduation date: Month, year
Bachelor of Science in Subject I studied GPA: 4.0
(note: the above has one line break for a total of two lines. If you're on mobile you might see it as multiple lines)
I'm currently about to start classes next term that will be pre requisites for a Master's program. I have not yet taken the GRE, or applied to the actual program (as without the pre-requisites I am ineligible flat out).
How should I put that I'm pursuing the MS? Currently I added to the last line
Master of Science in subject I will study - in progress
The chief reasons I want the MS to be on the resume in the first place are:
- So employers know that I am taking classes, and may need some slight flexibility in scheduling (a 9-6 won't quite be feasible)
- The jobs I'm looking at are Software development positions. My BS is in Industrial engineering (nothing to do with software) but the Master's is in Computer science. This should indicate that I know more than my education alone might give away (though relevant work experience listed elsewhere should also give that away).
resume education
resume education
edited Dec 8 '14 at 20:02
Conor
510415
510415
asked Dec 6 '14 at 23:23
user3246152user3246152
3562514
3562514
If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
5
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
4
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
2
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39
|
show 3 more comments
If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
5
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
4
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
2
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39
If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
5
5
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
4
4
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
2
2
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39
|
show 3 more comments
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
I would put it as:
University I am attending Expected graduation date: Month, year
(planned) Master of Science in Subject Current GPA: 4.0
Normally you don't put things you haven't earned on your resume. This is a notable exception because the job may not even consider you without you listing a degree in a specific field on your resume. Putting that may be enough to get you past HR who would otherwise ignore your application.
Similarly, you may want to do this if you were looking for a job just before graduation. In that case you have pretty much already earned the credentials, but you cannot say that you have yet, so you use the above as a "placeholder" of sorts to get a hiring manager's attention.
You should probably wait until you actually get into the program to do this. To an employer "Part of the program, but not yet graduated" may carry some value, but "Haven't started the program but trying to get into it" would likely seem pretty valueless.
add a comment |
It's pretty common to list an expected degree on a resume. The usual way to do this is to put your expected graduation date in parentheses and use words like "expected" to convey that you haven't completed the degree yet.
However, until you've at least taken a few useful and relevant classes, it may be too early to add it. You haven't really accomplished anything yet, so there's no merit to it from the potential employer's point of view. Especially before you've been accepted to the program. That could easily be viewed as exaggerating your qualifications.
Once you've made some real progress in the master's program, you can list your expected degree, as well as your GPA if it's good and any classes that are specifically relevant to the job.
add a comment |
You don't.
Resumes are summaries of what you've accomplished. You haven't accomplished this, yet.
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
add a comment |
You can indicate the program you're currently in if it is relevant to the jobs you're applying for, but don't assume because you're in a graduate program, everyone will think you can't work 9-6. Many CS Degrees are done online and at night to accommodate people still working in the field full-time. Address your availability in a cover letter.
Many jobs post that they require a CS Degree, something close to it or experience. There are jobs that will be impressed with a Masters in CS, but don't expect that to be typical. It is all going to come to whether you know how to code or can demonstrate your ability to learn quickly. Make sure you don't give the impression that you can't take graduate classes and work full-time. Focus on needing some time flexibility until you graduate.
add a comment |
how to address in resume that i studied 2 years in university but in fourth semester pending
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I would put it as:
University I am attending Expected graduation date: Month, year
(planned) Master of Science in Subject Current GPA: 4.0
Normally you don't put things you haven't earned on your resume. This is a notable exception because the job may not even consider you without you listing a degree in a specific field on your resume. Putting that may be enough to get you past HR who would otherwise ignore your application.
Similarly, you may want to do this if you were looking for a job just before graduation. In that case you have pretty much already earned the credentials, but you cannot say that you have yet, so you use the above as a "placeholder" of sorts to get a hiring manager's attention.
You should probably wait until you actually get into the program to do this. To an employer "Part of the program, but not yet graduated" may carry some value, but "Haven't started the program but trying to get into it" would likely seem pretty valueless.
add a comment |
I would put it as:
University I am attending Expected graduation date: Month, year
(planned) Master of Science in Subject Current GPA: 4.0
Normally you don't put things you haven't earned on your resume. This is a notable exception because the job may not even consider you without you listing a degree in a specific field on your resume. Putting that may be enough to get you past HR who would otherwise ignore your application.
Similarly, you may want to do this if you were looking for a job just before graduation. In that case you have pretty much already earned the credentials, but you cannot say that you have yet, so you use the above as a "placeholder" of sorts to get a hiring manager's attention.
You should probably wait until you actually get into the program to do this. To an employer "Part of the program, but not yet graduated" may carry some value, but "Haven't started the program but trying to get into it" would likely seem pretty valueless.
add a comment |
I would put it as:
University I am attending Expected graduation date: Month, year
(planned) Master of Science in Subject Current GPA: 4.0
Normally you don't put things you haven't earned on your resume. This is a notable exception because the job may not even consider you without you listing a degree in a specific field on your resume. Putting that may be enough to get you past HR who would otherwise ignore your application.
Similarly, you may want to do this if you were looking for a job just before graduation. In that case you have pretty much already earned the credentials, but you cannot say that you have yet, so you use the above as a "placeholder" of sorts to get a hiring manager's attention.
You should probably wait until you actually get into the program to do this. To an employer "Part of the program, but not yet graduated" may carry some value, but "Haven't started the program but trying to get into it" would likely seem pretty valueless.
I would put it as:
University I am attending Expected graduation date: Month, year
(planned) Master of Science in Subject Current GPA: 4.0
Normally you don't put things you haven't earned on your resume. This is a notable exception because the job may not even consider you without you listing a degree in a specific field on your resume. Putting that may be enough to get you past HR who would otherwise ignore your application.
Similarly, you may want to do this if you were looking for a job just before graduation. In that case you have pretty much already earned the credentials, but you cannot say that you have yet, so you use the above as a "placeholder" of sorts to get a hiring manager's attention.
You should probably wait until you actually get into the program to do this. To an employer "Part of the program, but not yet graduated" may carry some value, but "Haven't started the program but trying to get into it" would likely seem pretty valueless.
edited Dec 8 '14 at 20:34
answered Dec 7 '14 at 0:05
ConorConor
510415
510415
add a comment |
add a comment |
It's pretty common to list an expected degree on a resume. The usual way to do this is to put your expected graduation date in parentheses and use words like "expected" to convey that you haven't completed the degree yet.
However, until you've at least taken a few useful and relevant classes, it may be too early to add it. You haven't really accomplished anything yet, so there's no merit to it from the potential employer's point of view. Especially before you've been accepted to the program. That could easily be viewed as exaggerating your qualifications.
Once you've made some real progress in the master's program, you can list your expected degree, as well as your GPA if it's good and any classes that are specifically relevant to the job.
add a comment |
It's pretty common to list an expected degree on a resume. The usual way to do this is to put your expected graduation date in parentheses and use words like "expected" to convey that you haven't completed the degree yet.
However, until you've at least taken a few useful and relevant classes, it may be too early to add it. You haven't really accomplished anything yet, so there's no merit to it from the potential employer's point of view. Especially before you've been accepted to the program. That could easily be viewed as exaggerating your qualifications.
Once you've made some real progress in the master's program, you can list your expected degree, as well as your GPA if it's good and any classes that are specifically relevant to the job.
add a comment |
It's pretty common to list an expected degree on a resume. The usual way to do this is to put your expected graduation date in parentheses and use words like "expected" to convey that you haven't completed the degree yet.
However, until you've at least taken a few useful and relevant classes, it may be too early to add it. You haven't really accomplished anything yet, so there's no merit to it from the potential employer's point of view. Especially before you've been accepted to the program. That could easily be viewed as exaggerating your qualifications.
Once you've made some real progress in the master's program, you can list your expected degree, as well as your GPA if it's good and any classes that are specifically relevant to the job.
It's pretty common to list an expected degree on a resume. The usual way to do this is to put your expected graduation date in parentheses and use words like "expected" to convey that you haven't completed the degree yet.
However, until you've at least taken a few useful and relevant classes, it may be too early to add it. You haven't really accomplished anything yet, so there's no merit to it from the potential employer's point of view. Especially before you've been accepted to the program. That could easily be viewed as exaggerating your qualifications.
Once you've made some real progress in the master's program, you can list your expected degree, as well as your GPA if it's good and any classes that are specifically relevant to the job.
edited Dec 8 '14 at 20:41
answered Dec 8 '14 at 20:33
Kelly Tessena KeckKelly Tessena Keck
754410
754410
add a comment |
add a comment |
You don't.
Resumes are summaries of what you've accomplished. You haven't accomplished this, yet.
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
add a comment |
You don't.
Resumes are summaries of what you've accomplished. You haven't accomplished this, yet.
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
add a comment |
You don't.
Resumes are summaries of what you've accomplished. You haven't accomplished this, yet.
You don't.
Resumes are summaries of what you've accomplished. You haven't accomplished this, yet.
answered Dec 6 '14 at 23:35
Wesley LongWesley Long
50.3k17109182
50.3k17109182
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
add a comment |
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
2
2
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
It is quite normal to list your expected graduation date, particularly if you are in your last year of study and applying for a job for after you graduate or if you are pursuing a Master's or PhD and have completed everything except the thesis.
– Eric
Dec 9 '14 at 1:49
1
1
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
@Eric - Yes, I've seen that. That circumstance is not what we're talking about, here.
– Wesley Long
Dec 9 '14 at 2:19
add a comment |
You can indicate the program you're currently in if it is relevant to the jobs you're applying for, but don't assume because you're in a graduate program, everyone will think you can't work 9-6. Many CS Degrees are done online and at night to accommodate people still working in the field full-time. Address your availability in a cover letter.
Many jobs post that they require a CS Degree, something close to it or experience. There are jobs that will be impressed with a Masters in CS, but don't expect that to be typical. It is all going to come to whether you know how to code or can demonstrate your ability to learn quickly. Make sure you don't give the impression that you can't take graduate classes and work full-time. Focus on needing some time flexibility until you graduate.
add a comment |
You can indicate the program you're currently in if it is relevant to the jobs you're applying for, but don't assume because you're in a graduate program, everyone will think you can't work 9-6. Many CS Degrees are done online and at night to accommodate people still working in the field full-time. Address your availability in a cover letter.
Many jobs post that they require a CS Degree, something close to it or experience. There are jobs that will be impressed with a Masters in CS, but don't expect that to be typical. It is all going to come to whether you know how to code or can demonstrate your ability to learn quickly. Make sure you don't give the impression that you can't take graduate classes and work full-time. Focus on needing some time flexibility until you graduate.
add a comment |
You can indicate the program you're currently in if it is relevant to the jobs you're applying for, but don't assume because you're in a graduate program, everyone will think you can't work 9-6. Many CS Degrees are done online and at night to accommodate people still working in the field full-time. Address your availability in a cover letter.
Many jobs post that they require a CS Degree, something close to it or experience. There are jobs that will be impressed with a Masters in CS, but don't expect that to be typical. It is all going to come to whether you know how to code or can demonstrate your ability to learn quickly. Make sure you don't give the impression that you can't take graduate classes and work full-time. Focus on needing some time flexibility until you graduate.
You can indicate the program you're currently in if it is relevant to the jobs you're applying for, but don't assume because you're in a graduate program, everyone will think you can't work 9-6. Many CS Degrees are done online and at night to accommodate people still working in the field full-time. Address your availability in a cover letter.
Many jobs post that they require a CS Degree, something close to it or experience. There are jobs that will be impressed with a Masters in CS, but don't expect that to be typical. It is all going to come to whether you know how to code or can demonstrate your ability to learn quickly. Make sure you don't give the impression that you can't take graduate classes and work full-time. Focus on needing some time flexibility until you graduate.
answered Jan 19 '16 at 17:28
user8365
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how to address in resume that i studied 2 years in university but in fourth semester pending
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how to address in resume that i studied 2 years in university but in fourth semester pending
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how to address in resume that i studied 2 years in university but in fourth semester pending
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how to address in resume that i studied 2 years in university but in fourth semester pending
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answered 19 mins ago
tahataha
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1
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If you are doing an MS why do you need an up to date cv?
– bharal
Dec 6 '14 at 23:39
It's a part time MS (2 classes/semester) that I plan on completing while working.
– user3246152
Dec 6 '14 at 23:40
5
Have you been admitted into the MS program? It looks like until you have officially fulfilled the pre-reqs, you have not been officially admitted in the MS program. If you haven't been officially admitted into the MS program, then you are getting ahead of yourself and you are falsely creating the impression that you are in the MS program.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
Dec 6 '14 at 23:55
4
i would avoid the nonsense of "a 9-6 won't be feasible" when you're trying to get your foot in the door. Instead, when they start talking offers then you start discussing how you will need time off. For goodness' sake though, don't be saying "a 9-6 won't be feasible", that makes you sound terribly entitled. That you are attempting an MS gives nobody any inkling as to your capability in software - you have not done the degree, so why would anyone assume you know anything about it? The relevant work experience will be a much stronger suit than a degree you have not even been admitted to.
– bharal
Dec 7 '14 at 0:08
2
While it's totally reasonable to start discussing scheduling expectations when you get further along in the interview process, I think the concern @bharal had is your phrasing. Saying "A 9-6 schedule won't be feasible" almost implies that you expect the company to work around your schedule and might sound entitled. A better tone would sound more like asking if this is a possibility. Questions like "What are the typical working hours?" are better at the early stages. Once you have a later interview or an offer, I'd ask something like, "Would [XYZ schedule accommodation] be workable?"
– Kelly Tessena Keck
Dec 8 '14 at 20:39