Many schools, us included, do not limit the resume to 1 page. If you've been out of school a while and have the work history and undergrad involvement to fill 2 pages without it looking like you're just trying to fill space, I say do it.jackbauer10 wrote:I've now been out of school for a couple years, so I'll also be including current and past employment on my resume as well. Does anyone know protocol on how I should organize it all onto 1 page? Or any tips? I just don't want it to look like my life is all over the place . . .
This isn't really a "situation" of any consequence, really. Most people list only their degree-granting school on their resume and not every community college, etc. school they attended. However, in your case, I can see why you would want to so that you could list that you were a varsity athlete. The stuff about the disparity in your grades would go in a separate addendum so that's not a resume issue, per se.
As for organization, I know out in the business world there is much advice to put your strengths at the top, i.e. your education if you're fresh out of school or have impressive degrees and your jobs if you have a long work history that's more relevant to what you're trying to do. Personally, I get super annoyed when I don't see academics (college attended, major, honors, etc.) at the top of resumes in law school applications, but that could just be me.
Stephen M. Perez
Asst. Dean of Admissions, Texas Tech