Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can come up with two that could be on resume in early working years -- National Merit Scholar (not semi finalist but actual one) because nationally recognized and Eagle Scout. Being an eagle is something men talk about even later in life and it shows very positive strengths.
You consider homophobia a positive strength?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can come up with two that could be on resume in early working years -- National Merit Scholar (not semi finalist but actual one) because nationally recognized and Eagle Scout. Being an eagle is something men talk about even later in life and it shows very positive strengths.
Maybe Eagle Scout, but definitely not National Merit Scholar. I have never included the that information, not only because nobody cares, but more importantly because some people might think that I'm a jerk who is trying to show off how smart I am.
Nobody cares + might give people a bad impression = leave it off the resume.
National Merit matters if you are early in university and applying for academic honors. It can be a literal points thing. But for god's sake, not in any other capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you, OP?
48. Why?
Anonymous wrote:If you're out of your first year of college (or maaayybbeeee sophomore) and still need to put HS accolades on your resume, you're the same as that guy who wears his varsity letter jacket to the HS to the bar.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can come up with two that could be on resume in early working years -- National Merit Scholar (not semi finalist but actual one) because nationally recognized and Eagle Scout. Being an eagle is something men talk about even later in life and it shows very positive strengths.
Maybe Eagle Scout, but definitely not National Merit Scholar. I have never included the that information, not only because nobody cares, but more importantly because some people might think that I'm a jerk who is trying to show off how smart I am.
Nobody cares + might give people a bad impression = leave it off the resume.
Anonymous wrote: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.
...and you filled out the application with those numbers. I believe Bain also wanted your high school transcript (coming out of Grad School) as their hiring philosophy was they wanted a demonstrated track record)
Anonymous wrote:How old are you, OP?