Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Absolutely nothing. This reminds me of the person who wanted to be a teacher wanting to include praxis scores. NO employer cares about those!
If you won World Bagpipe Championship as a High School Senior, you would not put it on your resume?
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Absolutely nothing. This reminds me of the person who wanted to be a teacher wanting to include praxis scores. NO employer cares about those!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you put your SAT score on your resume?
Op here. If it were a Top Score.
I have never had anything from high school on my resume but in PPs defense when I graduated from college consulting firms like McKinsey and Bain sometimes asked for your SAT scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None.
I won a national engineering contest in high school. It went on my college applications, and on my resume until I was 21 (applying for my first "real" job after college). It hasn't appeared on my resume since then.
OP here. Suppose it weren’t specifically limited to engineers but were an all-around Academic Excellence accolade. Same answer?
By the way, I appreciate there is a clear consensus emerging. I’m just trying to probe this particular situation. Thank you.
The problem is that you are signalling you think this is impressive or relevant. My National Merit Scholarship award stayed on my resume until I went to university. After graduation from university, it was what I was able to do with my recent time and experience that was important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you put your SAT score on your resume?
Op here. If it were a Top Score.