Second-career resume

Nurses Job Hunt

Published

Specializes in Emergency Department.

I'm overhauling my resume, as are most of my classmates in preparation for graduation. I'm having trouble deciding what to put on it, as I have varied experience from a previous career. I want to stand out from the crowd. I'm hoping for an ER or critical care position. Here's what's on my resume, currently (in short form, for ease of reading here):

Education:

-BSN student, 3.9 GPA, honors, scholarships

-EMT certificate; NREMT, currently inactive status

-B.A. in journalism

Experience:

-Patient Care Tech - current. Obviously, this stays.

-Emergency Room Tech - 10 years ago, but I really want to work in ER/critical care, and this shows experience in ER. Keep or remove?

-Utilization Management Support Coordinator - over 10 years old. I could probably drop this, but it gave me an interesting perspective on utilization review. Not sure if that would be helpful or not. Keep or remove?

-Freelance journalist - 2001-2015. I ran my own freelance journalism business while traveling around the country and world for 15 years. Not remotely nursing related, but the skills I developed doing this have helped me become a good communicator with my patients and have honed my organizational skills. Keep or remove?

Regarding clinical experiences, I'm just planning on a simple list, like this:

Clinical Experiences:

Adult Medical-Surgical - Spring 2016, XXX Hospital, Anytown, USA

Adult Medical-Surgical II - Summer 2016, XXX Hospital, Anytown, USA

Pediatrics - Fall 2016, Children's Hospital, Anytown, USA

Obstetrics - Fall 2016, XXX Hospital, Anytown, USA

I presume I don't need to elaborate on my clinical experiences, as they're pretty standard, correct? I will elaborate on my practicum, once it's finished.

Thank you for any input you have.

Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.

I think your general game plan is a good one. Include the basic information about your previous jobs, but condense the information as much as reasonably possible.

I recommend putting your student clinical experiences on a separate sheet in order to keep your basic resume as close to 1 page as possible. Simply state your education, degree, graduation date, etc. and use 1 line to list your practicum experience (maybe 2 if it is very pertinent to the job you seek). Then say along the line of: "See addition page for more information about nursing school experiences." That allows you to provide the information without cluttering up your main page.

Good luck.

There are tons of great professional resume services out there that offer free resume service trial offers. I used one. Don't use the template that comes in MS office, because you're less likely to stand out.

Keep it to one page. As a nursing student/new grad, even as a second career, more than one page can look like you're fluffing it up.

Sections I included in mine

A professional summary, just an overview of me in three-four sentences.

A skills list, put your CNA, EMT, CPR, relevant CE stuff in here

Education, Yours looks good, but I would drop the GPA/honors at that section there's a place for honors later, and honors means high GPA

Clinical experience, I had to shorten my stuff to bare minimums to get it to fit, but it did

Work History, I dropped anything from before I went back to school, mostly to save room/not relevant. It also helps avoid aging myself.

Additional Info, Where I included things like Honor society, NSA, volunteer work, etc in a nice neat package of "look, I get involved and work hard."

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