How To Write A College Freshman Resume (With Examples)
A college freshman resume is a resume written by a first-year college student. As a college student, you’re only just beginning to figure out what it is you may want to do for the rest of your adult life. From your place in the career world to your own personal identity, there are a lot of things that you are working on gaining a clear vision for, especially as a college freshman.
In this transition between childhood and young adulthood, you are just beginning to gain experience, specialized skills, and an understanding of how to behave in the professional world. You don’t quite have the experience and know-how required for most industries yet, but you aren’t expected to either.
Resumes are crucial parts of so many different application processes. Reasons you may need a resume include:
- Work study
- Internships
- Student Leadership positions
- Scholarships
- On-campus or part-time jobs
Typically, resumes only itemize adult, professional experiences. This means that high school (or prior) information is left off. However, as a college freshman, many of your accomplishments may have taken place in high school, and it’s acceptable to include them. This is the key difference between a college freshman resume and a typical professional resume.
What to Include in a College Freshman Resume
The following sections should be included in your resume as a college freshman:
- Contact information. Your contact information is possibly the most crucial section on your resume, as it links all of the contents of the resume back to you as an individual. It should be the very first thing seen on your resume, in an easy to locate spot, and your name should be the largest piece of text. You’ll want to include all of the following:
- Your full name
- Your address (on campus or at home, depending on what you are applying for)
- Your phone number
- Your email address
- Your professional social media accounts (i.e., Linkedin)
- Professional blog or portfolio if you have one
- Resume objective/summary. Your resume objective or summary goes at the top of your layout. It gives a quick and compelling intro to the contents of your resume. This section will be no more than 150 characters, and it will describe the goals you have for whatever you’re applying for, as well as your demonstrated skills and achievements that will help you meet these goals. Try not to make this section vague or focused too much on your personal wishes. Instead, be clear and precise in summarizing and quantifying your experience. This might include your field of study, along with the amount of time you’ve spent engaging in whatever is required of applicants.
- Education background. Your education section will likely be one of your most impressive sections as a college freshman, so feature it near the top. Lead with what you’re majoring in or your primary focus of study to help give your resume-readers a picture of the skills you’re working to build. Under that, list the institution you’re attending and your expected date of graduation. Include any honors or awards you might have achieved in your academic career. To beef up your education and demonstrate your fit for a position, you could even list relevant coursework or classes. Include high school academic information and achievements if there is something there that would knock a hiring manager’s (or scholarship committee) socks off, but it isn’t strictly necessary.
- Work experience. It’s quite likely and expected that you don’t have much (or any) professional experience in your field of choice. However, If you have any work experience at all, even if it doesn’t seem strictly relevant to the position, you should list it here. Resume-readers of all types agree that one of the most important aspects of a resume is determining someone’s work ethic. If you’ve held a part-time or summer job or engaged in an internship during your schooling, that’s no small feat. Listing these jobs shows that you are hardworking and have begun developing your professional tool kit. List your work experiences in reverse chronological order, meaning the most recent will be first and the earliest will be last. Each entry should contain the following:
- The title of your position
- The period you worked there
- The name of the organization
- Key qualifications and responsibilities
- Your most significant achievements in this position, in 2-5 bullet points
- Relevant skills. This section will be used to highlight and name what you are good at. You can include hard skills – anything that requires teaching or training to learn, such as HTML coding – and soft skills – anything that comes naturally to you or is a part of your personality, such as interpersonal communication. While soft skills are incredibly important in action, their subjectivity makes it hard to “prove” you actually possess them. Hard skills or technical skills are more concrete, so they tend to hold a bit more water on resumes. Make sure that all the skills you’re listing are relevant to what you’re applying for. It’s best to tailor this section according to the job (position, etc.) description.
- Extracurricular activities. As a college freshman, it’s likely that a lot of your big achievements, valuable experiences, and learning moments have come from your extracurricular experiences. This could be sports, clubs, associations, theater, student government, etc. Typically, these are left off of resumes (outside of exceptional circumstances), but for a college freshman, they can be a great demonstration of your personality and capabilities. List only significant experiences or extracurriculars you were involved with for an extended period of time. You could list this as its own separate section, include it with your education section, or put it with other optional sections.
- Optional sections. There are some other options for appropriate sections you can include on your resume. You could even combine multiple sections from this category with each other or with your extracurriculars (just make sure to be clear). Be sure that any information you include on your resume is both relevant and valuable to the specific position you’re applying for. Some optional sections you can think about incorporating include:
- Hobbies and interests
- Awards and honors
- Volunteer work
- Language proficiencies
College Freshman Resume Template and Example
- Resume Template:
First Name Last Name
- [Impressive accomplishment]
- [Quantifiable experience]
- [Use present tense if still working this job]
- [Use past tense verbs to start each sentence]
- [Strong action verbs work best]
- [Use numbers when possible]
- [Brief 1-2 line description of your involvement with a relevant extracurricular activity]
- [Don’t include the same item twice; if you listed an extracurricular in your education section, don’t add more here]
- [Hard skill 1] (Be specific with names of software/tools you’re skilled with)
- [Hard skill 2]
- [Hard skill 3]
- [Hard skill 4]
- [Soft skill 1] (Make sure soft skills are reflected in your experience, education, and summary/obective also)
- [Soft skill 2]
Malia Davis
- Member of OSU writing group that meets weekly to practice and hone writing skills.
- Member of Marketing and Communications Fraternity, collaborating on monthly volunteer marketing projects
- Collaborated on a variety of marketing materials for print and web.
- Wrote and designed pamphlets and flyers independently to increase community awareness
- Organized digital marketing files
- Increased Lovepups membership rates by 20%
- Managed customer orders in-person and via phone
- Balanced cleaning and customer service duties to ensure the best customer experience
- Influenced customers through promoting new items and special deals
- Good knowledge of Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram algorithms and content strategies
- Intermediate HTML and CSS coding
- Academic and professional writing
- Adobe Photoshop
- Great teamwork and collaboration skills
- Spanish language fluency
- Project leadership
- Top 2% of graduating class of 100 at Grand Rapids Montessori High
- Achieved GRMH perfect attendance award for four consecutive years
- Earned Linda Everly Honors Scholarship, a competitive OSU scholarship for outstanding academic achievement
Tips for Writing a Resume in College
Here are three crucial tips for writing a great resume as a college freshman:
- Strategically decide on sections. Before you even begin creating your resume, sit down, and have a huge brainstorming session about anything and everything you could possibly include. After you make your mega-list, go through and circle the things you think would be the most helpful to include. Take these circled entries and categorize them. Based on this, decide which sections you’re going to include to show these things off without being redundant. You’ll have to include categories like education and work experience, of course, but be strategic with what other sections you include and how you include them.
- Write effective bullet points. Within each section, consolidate the details and descriptive information into bullet points. When writing your bullet points, always keep in mind the words used in the job description (or in the description of whatever you’re applying for) and try to incorporate them. Write in a concise, functional way focused on packing as much information into as few words as possible. Avoid using the first-person over and over again to describe your experiences, and just start directly with the verb (action word) that describes what you did. Use vivid, colorful verbs to amp up the power. Each bullet point should be no more than two lines of text, but ideally no more than one line. Also, be sure to use the active voice throughout for clarity (e.g., “managed a team” rather than “a team was managed by me”).
- Use the right format. Your resume design and layout can help give resume-readers a better look at who you are and how you choose to present yourself. Pick colors and structures that speak to you and that you feel are best for the task at hand. However, there are some rules you should generally stick by. As stated previously, you’ll want to list the entries in each section in reverse chronological order. Use easy to read, consistent fonts (no more than two distinct fonts) throughout. Keep the margins to at least an inch, and make your name the largest piece of text on your resume.
- Proofread your resume. One of the biggest mistakes you can make is not reading over your resume before submitting it. It looks unprofessional if you send in a resume that has spelling and grammar mistakes. Take a few extra minutes and make sure all the dates are correct and you aren’t missing anything. You can even have a friend or a professor look over it to catch anything you might have missed. This step could make the difference between you getting a job or internship and not getting it.
- Stick to one page. A resume should only be one page. Employers don’t have much time to read over your resume so keeping it to one page and sticking with all the relevant information is important.
- Get help if you need it. Don’t be afraid to go to your professor or the career services center if you need help on your resume. That’s what they are there for. The career center will be able to help give you a starting point and help you organize your resume for potential employers.
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