5 first-year experiences to boost your co-op resume

You may not have much professional experience yet, but chances are, you鈥檝e done some part-time work, peer tutoring, or extra-curriculars where you鈥檝e learned skills. Even if you don鈥檛 feel like you have a lot of experience on paper, you will quickly build up a body of work during your time at Northeastern.
Here are five ways to highlight your capabilities and potential.
- Put your education first. Show potential employers that you鈥檙e learning skills that you can apply on co-op. List your GPA, scholarships, honors and awards, and other achievements from high school. If you鈥檝e taken or are currently taking classes in your career interest (even in your first college semester), list those under a subheading like 鈥淩elevant Coursework.鈥 A Related Projects or Research section is a great place to note a capstone project, student research, and key topics you鈥檝e mastered.
- Show off your experience. The Experience section of your resume shouldn鈥檛 read like a job description; use it to highlight your accomplishments and results. If you鈥檝e already completed a co-op, this is where to include those achievements. List any paid positions you have held (including summer or part-time jobs like retail, tutoring, waiting tables, babysitting 鈥 it all counts!) and use bullet points to emphasize each job鈥檚 most relevant tasks. For example, if you鈥檙e applying for a marketing co-op, list each job鈥檚 marketing-related activities first, even if they weren鈥檛 primary responsibilities.
- Include volunteer positions, internships, and extracurriculars. These experiences can demonstrate valuable skills鈥攆or example, your role as captain of a varsity team shows your leadership abilities, or your experience as the club co-chair conveys your organizational skills. Make sure you note any memberships in student clubs relevant to your area of interest. Also, if you participated in volunteer work or student leadership activities, describe those accomplishments in more detail.
- List ALL your skills. The skills section can include several categories鈥攕uch as software, instrumentation, language, social media platforms, laboratory or computer skills. Remember that employers are searching for a combination of soft skills and hard skills. For positions that require technical knowledge, place a Technical Skills section after the Education section.
- Share your interests. This section can help you demonstrate your personality. Showcase some hobbies and pastimes, especially in relevant areas like entrepreneurship, innovation or technology. But don鈥檛 be shy! Most hobbies require dedication and commitment, too, which employers like to see.
Follow these tips to refine your resum茅, then upload it to , our new resum茅-building tool. You can also meet with the team to have your resum茅 critiqued during virtual or in-person drop-ins, or make an appointment with a career counselor.