Typically, a resume objective is
a short paragraph marking the beginning of the document.
Not exact matches
Mark Bittman's column in today's NY Times («Why I»n Not A Vegan») has a
short paragraph on Paleo with a link to a troubling mouse study from 2009 by Foo, Heller and others.
The activities include a gapfill task, translation in both tenses (recap), a match - up, using pictures as prompts to write
short sentences, a listening task (if you have access to the AQA Studio Higher textbook), a translation into French (
paragraph), a role play (differentiated F / H) including advice on how to form questions with «est - ce que» and the role play
mark scheme.
«The agent query that
Mark helped me write captured the essence of my voice in a tight, professional format that allowed agents to get everything they needed in four
short paragraphs.
In Almost Invisible Pulitzer Prize winner
Mark Strand forgoes verse for prose, offering a transportive group of poems, each in the form of a
short paragraph.
A professional summary isn't much more than a
short paragraph of self - praise that
marks the beginning of your resume.
Have you ever wondered what would happen if you took out the
short paragraph that
marks the beginning of your resume?
Contrary to what many will tell you, an objective is a
short paragraph that
marks the beginning of your resume, allowing the hiring manager to get to know you.
A summary is a
short paragraph that
marks the beginning of a resume, introducing the applicant to a prospective employer.