I can absolutely guarantee, double your money back, that no parent will scrutinize your resume enough to notice if you don't put them down.
Wrong.
Like the other MB, I would absolutely ask about the gap. Any parent who doesn't want to know the work history, and who doesn't pay attention to multiple short tenures or unexplained gaps, is a fool.
That said, OP - i think the advice to include one at least is good. You have lots of solid tenure on your resume, and presumably good references from them? If I were interviewing you I would want to know why the last two weren't a good fit. So spend some time trying to figure that out, or at least in trying to come up w/ a way to answer that question that doesn't seem flighty.
I've been a victim of a short tenured job because I picked poorly - so I would understand, and I would respect your honesty. If I sense you're trying to cover something up (like pp seems to suggest) then I would be concerned and it could easily put you in a more questionable position.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since it is only six months, I would leave them out.
If you really need to explain a gap in your resume, you can always claim you had a family emergency out of state or that you were taking a class.
So you're recommending to start a prospective new relationship w/ lying? If I'm interviewing and I sense deceit you are out of the running. ESPECIALLY for a nanny position. One of the top non-negotiables is honesty and trust.
So you'd better be an excellent liar on the spot, and prepared to sustain a lie over the long-term if you choose this approach.
People rarely lie as well as they think. The interviewer might not be sharp enough to catch it, but that's a risky bet.
Anonymous wrote:Since it is only six months, I would leave them out.
If you really need to explain a gap in your resume, you can always claim you had a family emergency out of state or that you were taking a class.
Anonymous wrote:I can absolutely guarantee, double your money back, that no parent will scrutinize your resume enough to notice if you don't put them down.