[Jobs] Briefcases was Re: Objective on Resume
Harmeet Sekhon
h_sekhon at comcast.net
Tue May 23 16:03:09 CDT 2006
Oh yeah! Agree with you completely about fanny packs and backpacks. Not
during a job interview. Nope. I live in jeans. When I don't have denim
on, I'm not feeling too good. But during a job interview or at a job where
a more formal dress code is required, I can wait until I get home. I think
its sort of a parallel with backpacks. There's a time and a place, and this
isn't it.
Now, the zipper notebook thing might work really well too. I don't have a
whole lot, but this might easily accomodate what I want to take. Not many
notes will need to be taken in most circumstances I think, but a slate and a
stylus could fit nicely into something like that. Hmmm...Maybe a simple,
black, zippered notebook then...
Harmeet
-----Original Message-----
From: jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org]On Behalf
Of Jessie Rayl
Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 1:55 PM
To: Jobs for the Blind
Subject: [Jobs] Briefcases was Re: Objective on Resume
Hi. Well, I think it is very much up to the person and probably how much
stuff you are going to carry but first, I have never
seen a professional-looking backpack and would not! recommend such a thing
going into an interview. Those are for school /
college, hiking / camping and shopping / touring and we need to keep them
there, please. <smiles>
Briefcases, on the other hand, are everything from laptop cases to regular
briefcases and some have both a handle and a strap,
some just have a handle. You can sit the case down, correct the dog, pick
the case up and go on although I cannot quite see
myself doing all of that. When my dog acts out, he gets corrected now, fast
and straight-out. We don't worry about sitting
briefcase down and the last thing I want to do is sit it down in a mud
puddle or have it go flying off the side of the walk or
down a flight of steps--and that is just my luck of course. <grin> But
then, I'm talking about a small briefcase too, not a big
huge totebag-looking thing. So again, how much stuff are we talking about
carrying here? One of those zipper notebooks might
work quite nicely and you can tuck that under an arm, give dog either a left
or right handed correction, or use that freed right
hand for whatever else it might be needed for with the notebook tucked under
your arm, and keep right on moving. They hold
resumes, CDs and the like quite well, and a braille slate too--and it is
most often what I take to meetings, etc. Then would be a
briefcase, and then! would be the laptop. But please! leave the fannypacks
and backpacks for other places.
Jessie L. Rayl, MA LPC
Pathways Counseling Services
101 Medical Ct, Suite 108
Martinsburg, WV 25401
Phone: (304) 262-8020
Telecopier: (304) 262-8099
Email: eagle.wings at verizon.net
Disclaimer:
In compliance with HIPAA regulations, the information in this document is
confidential and privileged information. If you are not
the intended recipient, you are requested to return this document to me
immediately upon receipt. Thank you.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sherry Gomes" <sherriola at earthlink.net>
To: "'Jobs for the Blind'" <jobs at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 4:07 PM
Subject: Re: [Jobs] Objective on Resume
> my resume has my name and the month/year, such as 5/2006, and other codes
I
> develop. But it's the cover letters that I title with the job title or
job
> code. I've been thanked many times by employers for having my name as the
> part of the title for my resume. for example, my current generic one is
> titled
>
> sherry Gomes resume 6-2006.doc
>
> as for your dog, Harmeet, I'm always going in with a briefcase, and not
one
> with a shoulder strap because I think it looks tacky. But I'm carrying my
> resume, my braille note and things like that, so I think it looks more
> professional. If I had to correct my dog, which thankfully doesn't come
up
> often, I would either drop the harness handle and give a left handed
> correction, or I would put down the briefcase.
>
> It's not a dumb question! these are things we all have to think about.
>
> Sherry
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of
> Harmeet Sekhon
> Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 1:02 PM
> To: Jobs for the Blind
> Subject: Re: [Jobs] Objective on Resume
>
> Sherry,
>
> That's what I'm learning too. From you and from others I've talked to.
Is
> it a good idea to title the resume with the job title then? That, along
> with the requisition number if one is given in a job posting?
>
> Also, I know that this is going to apply perhaps more for those of you who
> work guide dogs, but we're often encouraged not to carry anything in our
> free hand when we work a dog. This is so that, if we need to, we can have
> that hand free to correct our dogs. Because even if your dogs are little
> angels like mine and Sherry's, sometimes that correction needs to happen.
> So here's my question: Do I try to get a briefcase or something to carry
> extra copies of my resume, my Jaws program CD's so that I can show them as
a
> prop during the interview, and any other paperwork I might need for the
job
> interview? If so, won't that defeat the purpose of keeping my hand free?
> This might be a ridiculous question, but I don't know how a guy like me
> would do it properly any way other than carying a briefcase with a handle
in
> my right hand, while working my dog in my left.
>
> Or, am I just a paranoid nut?
>
> Harmeet
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org]On Behalf Of
> Sherry Gomes
> Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 6:06 AM
> To: 'Jobs for the Blind'
> Subject: Re: [Jobs] Objective on Resume
>
>
> Hi Bonnie,
>
> putting objectives on your resume isn't generally done now. in fact, it's
> become sort of taboo. Not an absolute no, but not necessary anymore.
>
> I definitely do not have objective on my resume.
>
> Sherry
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of
> Bonnie Ainsworth
> Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 5:50 AM
> To: Jobs for the Blind
> Subject: [Jobs] Objective on Resume
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm creating a new resume and was wondering what some of you who are
working
> in clerical positions put in the "objective" block of your resumes. The
> resume I currently have was done by a former Federal employee, and since
it
> was created for Government use, that information wasn't necessary. Also,
> for those of you who work in the Federal Government, I was using Form
OF-612
> which you all know is long and tedious.
> Thanks in advance for any help you can give me.
>
> Bonnie
>
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