| COVER LETTERS AND RÉSUMÉ |
W6 |
The aim of this leaflet
This Advice Sheet provides you with information on various learning
materials for writing cover letters and resumes. It also suggests
learning strategies and tips for improving relevant writing skills
for job-seeking purposes.
Materials in the SAC
The books on job-seeking are located in the ‘Reading &
Writing’ Area. If you have time, flip through the books on
the shelf that you like and then decide which book(s) you find most
useful. The next step is to identify the chapters in those books
and plan realistically how you are going to use the materials. Do
not attempt to finish the whole book no matter how good it is –
only select the most useful chapters for yourself. Remember you
are in charge of your learning so you decide what you want to learn,
and how to do it.
- Writing into a Job C
C
It mainly teaches how to write resumes. It shows you how you can
best describe yourself and present your qualifications by using
appropriate words and styles; for example, you will find a list
of adjectives describing yourself on p.7. Resumes of different
styles are included and explained.
- Job Interviews for Dummies C
Resumes for Dummies C
Cover Letters for Dummies C
The ‘Dummies’ series are
very easy to read. They show you how to write cover letters and
resumes using a step-by-step approach. While the explanations are
clear and the samples are useful, HKUST students should bear in
mind that the Dummies series were published
in America and the target readers are mainly American. Some advice
given in the Dummies series, therefore,
may not be suitable for fresh graduates or Hong Kong people. If
you are not sure whether the tone and style of a particular letter
is appropriate for you to adapt, you can check with an Adviser in
the SAC.
- Write for the Job C
It contains units on common errors, job application letters, resumes
and even resignation letters. The explanations are clear and there
are exercises to help you practise what you have learnt from the
book.
- Technical Writing & Professional Communication,
Part 4, pp. 187-205
The first unit of Part 4 of this book offers useful information
on writing resumes and job letters. This will be particularly
useful for students who are studying engineering or science subjects.
- Business Writing for Hong Kong, Part
2, pp. 193 – 224
Specially written for Hong Kong people. Part
2 of this book shows you how you can produce winning job applications.
- The Complete Book of Contemporary Business Letters
Chapter 11 of this books offers comprehensive information on writing
different types of job-seeking related documents. Topics include:
resignation letters, resumes, cover letters, thank-you letters
and so on.
Materials on the Web
| Specially for HKUST students |
- Job application sills resources [HKUST]
C
C
C
http://lc.ust.hk/~material/jobseek/
The target readers are final-year undergraduates at HKUST.
This website provides a comprehensive set of web-based information
covering self-analysis, job & company analysis, resume writing,
cover letter writing and interviewing. Highly recommended.
| General and comprehensive |
- California job search guide C
C
http://jobstar.org/tools/resume/
A very comprehensive site for cover letters and resumes. It provides
sample cover letters and resumes and shows you how to produce
yours. You should, however, note that the information in the website
is mainly for American, so the tone and style embedded in the
sample documents may be very different from those you are used
to. If you have queries about tone and style of these documents,
please talk to our SAC Advisers.
- Best College cover letters C
C
http://www.collegegrad.com/index.shtml
It covers almost every aspect of writing for job hunting. The
information and advice is excellent but again you need to be aware
that the target audience are mainly US college graduates.
- The Dynamic Cover Letters Formula
C
http://www.quintcareers.com/cover_letters.html
There are some useful tips for writing resumes and cover letters.
This is also another US-based website.
- Resume and cover letters [Helsinki
University of Technology, Finland]
http://www.ruthvilmi.net/hut/LangHelp/Writing/#business
This website offers comprehensive information on writing of CV
and cover letters. There are also useful writing tips in the same
website.
- Examples of resumes and cover letters
[Austin Community College, USA]
http://www.io.com/~hcexres/tcm1603/acchtml/models.html
You will find useful examples of CV and cover letters, with clear
explanations.
| Quick revision and samples |
Some advice …
Some people say that a cover letter is a sales letter – that
you are selling your qualifications to your potential employers.
If so, then it is obvious that you should never hard-sell yourselves.
You don’t want to put people off, do you?
When writing a cover letter:
| ˆ¢ |
Make sure you know the
job requirements very well. If the job requirements are not
stated very clearly in the advertisement, do some research
yourself: find out more about the company and the job vacancy.
|
| ˆ¢ |
THINK: what questions
do you want to be asked at the interview? Do you want people
to ask you about your academic qualifications? What aspects?
Your final-year project? Why? Your summer work experience?
Your personality? Why? Put the ‘hints’ in the
cover letter by including the key information of these aspects
in the cover letter to highlight the top quality that you
have and ‘guide’ your readers to find out more
from you. |
| ˆ¢ |
Never copy a cover letter
directly from a textbook or from a friend. You have to think
about your own strengths and present them in the letter in
accordance with the job requirements. |
| ˆ¢ |
Don’t assume that you can write a standard
cover letter and use it all the time for all jobs. |
| ˆ¢ |
Don’t be too modest
— your potential boss is not interested in knowing what
you can’t do. They want to know what you can do and
how you can contribute to the post. |
When writing a resume:
| ˆ¢ |
Don’t assume that
you can write a standard resume and use it all the time for
all jobs. |
| ˆ¢ |
A resume is not only
a list of your qualifications — it presents you at your
best. We suggest you spend some time deciding the approach
that you want to adopt. What do you want to emphasise: academic
qualifications? Work experience? Projects conducted? Skills
possessed? Make sure that the arrangement of the information
helps you highlight the qualifications that you want to sell. |
| ˆ¢ |
Use action verbs to describe
the job duties of your work experience; avoid using verbs
such as ‘do’, ‘deal with’ or ‘handle’
as these words do not really tell people what you have actually
done and what you can do. Please turn to Resumes
for Dummies pp. 65-76 for lists of action verbs,
and Writing into a Job p.7 for a
list of adjectives describing yourself. |
| ˆ¢ |
Stick to only one or two different fonts in
a resume as too many changes in font and font size will make
reading very difficult. A lot of people seem to agree that fonts
with serifs (a serif is a small line at the end of the stroke
of a letter) such as ‘Times Roman’ are easier to
read than fonts without serifs such as ‘Helvetica’. |
| ˆ¢ |
Always match the content
of your resume with the job requirements. Make sure that the
qualifications relevant to the job specifications stand out.
|
Learning tips
- Looking for a crash course (intensive course hoping for quick
results) on how to write cover letters and resumes? You can try
the websites under ‘Quick revision and samples’. You
will also find Unit 9 of Business Writing for Hong
Kong and the ‘Job Seeking’
folder useful.
- If you want to look at examples of authentic resumes and cover
letters, try the CD-ROM materials. The CD-ROM materials are near
the entrance of the main entrance of the Language Commons.
- You can make an appointment with the English Writing Centre
(EWC) and ask the EWC consultant to comment on your resumes and
job application letters. You can ask in the SAC for information
about the EWC, or check the EWC home page: http://lc.ust.hk/~ewc/
for more details.
- Do a Diagnostic test with either AutoLANG
or other materials (please read Writing Advice Sheet W2
and Grammar Advice Sheet G3
for information on this), find out your weaknesses in writing
and then decide what practice you need to improve your writing
skills. You need to identify the areas that need improvement —
simply writing more won’t necessarily make your writing
better.
- For an introduction to the styles and basic structures of business
writing, read Chapters 1 and 2 of A Handbook of Commercial
Correspondence, Chapters 1-3 of Business
English and Communication, or Part 1 of Business
Writing for Hong Kong.
- Come to the Lobby of the Language Commons and look for this
monthly language learning magazine: The Language Key.
If you are always busy and feel that you can’t do your self-learning
regularly and systematically, you will find this magazine useful.
There are different foci in different issues so even if you don’t
have time to devise your own learning plan, you are still able
to do your learning systematically.
- In writing, do you often feel that you lack the vocabulary
you need? If this is the case, read the Advice Sheet Learning
Vocabulary for Speaking and Writing (V8).
- Do you feel that you need to improve the grammar and sentence
structures in your writing? If so, read the Grammar Advice Sheets
Grammar For Writing (G4),
and Sentence Structure & Style (W5).
- Read the Writing Advice Sheet Developing
your own Writing Programme (W2) for information on
writing strategies and tips for creating writing opportunities.
And Now...
If you would like any help or advice, or just a chat about your
progress, please get in touch — we are here to support your
independent learning! This is how you can contact us:
- see an Adviser,
on duty at the SAC Advice Desk (for details of advisers and their availability, please go to http://lc.ust.hk/~sac/sacadviser.html)
- e-mail lcsac (lccommons@ust.hk) with your query;
- ask at the reception counter of the SAC — if the receptionist cannot help you directly, s/he will pass your query on to one of the SAC advisers
Note
The introductory leaflet in this series is Improving
your writing (W1).
This advice sheet is part of the Writing series of leaflets supporting
language learning, produced by the HKUST Language Center SAC team.
This advice sheet was written by Elza Tsang, Oct 2001. Version 2.
If you copy from this advice sheet, please acknowledge the source.
Thanks. |