Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Notes- the third installment
ROP Career Skills Notes
- Creating a good resume (visually) is vital. Eye catching design will surely get your employer's attention.
- Certificates will boost you greatly.
- Hearing about how you solve problems is also a good thing.
Your ROP Portfolio:
- Letter of Introduction
- Resume
- List of References
- Letter of Recommendation
Job Seekers Trifecta:
- A solid, well written and well designed resume.
- An equally well crafted list of positive references.
- A flawless handwritten job application.
Your Resume Should Have...
- Who you are and how you can be contacted. (Email, phone number, ect.)
- Your job objective. (Which job would you like? Use fancy words.)
- Your level of education. (Education history. When you started, when you hope to graduate, ect.)
- Your work history or experience.
- Your special skills and abilities.
Edit and Refine your Resume:
- Take time to write your resume. Pour your knowledge and stuffs on to that paper.
- No typos, use spellcheck.
- No mistakes, look for double words and grammar errors.
- No misleading information. (Embellishment is good, but don't go too far. "I'm a math genius!!!!" is misleading.)
- Format your text for easy reading and searching. (Choose an appropriate, professional typeface.)
Resume Writing Tips:
- List most recent job experience firsthand. (Volunteer work ect)
- List most important skills first.
- Leave out the obvious.
- Avoid negativity. (Tell your employer that your last job was terminated due to a misplacement of yourself. you didn't feel right for that job.)
- Go with what you got: summer jobs, volunteer experience, clubs, relevant hobbies, ect.
Style Can Vary:
- Just keep it professional, well organized and easy to read. Avoid color background/colored paper for your resume.
**ROP Portfolio Handbook**
How to get started:
- Find a program to write your resume on. (Word, Google Docs, ect.)
- Think of what your ideal job might be this summer or in the future, align your resume info and objectives to get that job.
- Use the Resume Template in the ROP Portfolio Handbook and list your important details.
*~have fun~*
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Notes - The Second Intsallment
Design Typography
- thoughts should be legible. choose a font/color that is easy to see and/or aesthetically pleasing (baskerville, frutiger, futura, garamond, gill sans, helvetica, palatino, new times roman)- serif: reads best at smaller sizes.
sans serif: reads best when in headlines, headers, a bigger font.
- font variance is a power that must be used for good. don't use too many fonts; it'll look gross.
- fonts that are too similar cause ambiguity and confusion. do not do that.
- all caps are difficult to read, and gives off the feeling that you are being yelled at. use that with power, as well. STUPID.
- left alignment reads easiest, considering 'eye flow' as it moves down a page.
- use emphasis tools (bold, italics, size, color, typestyle change) with discretion and without disturbing the 'eye flow'.
- avoid stretching/squashing/distorting your typing. keep your integrity.
- strive for a sense of balance within the weight. light? or heavy?
- kearning is editing the space between letters in the helvetica font. kearning makes it look much, much more uniform and clean.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)








