Most jobseekers write these in three to five first -
person sentence fragments using no personal pronouns.
Notice how it is kept to only three first -
person sentence fragments and points out the top qualities that the jobseeker wants known, namely, a dedication to improving performance and the ability to use both traditional and technological teaching methods.
Not exact matches
How do you reconcile these two
sentence fragments: (1) ``... losing 191,367
people to other states in the year ending last July 1...» and (2) «As of July 1..
Context as in who this
person was and in what capacity they were talking, whether this was an official press release or an off - the - cuff comment, what else was said along with these two extracted
sentence fragments which might moderate or clarify the message.
Throughout your entire resume, beginning with your summary, keep in mind that
sentence fragments are preferred over complete
sentences, and there's no place for first -
person pronouns in your resume.
For one, he keeps his summary statement to three
sentence fragments written in the first
person.
It's common practice in this section to use
sentence fragments written in first
person without the pronouns.
As shown in our librarian resume samples, you can use
sentence fragments, but make sure to conjugate verbs in the first
person.
Keep yours concise, using three or four
sentence fragments with third -
person verbs.
Sentence fragments are acceptable, but craft your statements using first -
person verbs.
It should be written in the first
person without pronouns, include your professional title, and utilize
sentence fragments.
If you view your resume summary as a first -
person story with the first -
person pronouns removed, you'll end up with concise
sentence fragments, which, in this case, are preferred over complete
sentences.
And then I came across one
fragment of a
sentence from columnist Tabatha Southey in the Grope and Flail, June 1, 2013: ``... it explains almost every left - wing protest I've attended — the ones with lots of
people and no good chants, where half the attendees think that the crowd should march to another location and the rest are still trying to get their candles lit.»