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Paragraph
Style
by ResumeEdge.com -
The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
Good advertisements
are designed in such a way that the reader's eye is immediately
drawn to important pieces of information using type and graphic
elements, including bold, italics, and headline fonts, and
so forth. Then the design must guide the reader's eye down
the page from one piece of information to the next with the
use of white space or graphic designs between short paragraphs.
In this science
of typography, very long lines of text (longer than six or
seven inches, depending on the font) and large blocks of text
(more than seven typeset lines) are considered to be tiring
to the reader's eye. If you look closely at textbooks, magazines,
and newspapers, you will notice that the information is usually
typeset in columns to reduce line lengths, and journalists
intentionally write in short paragraphs because they are more
reader friendly.
How does
this science translate into the design of a résumé? As a general
rule, you should keep your lines of text no longer than seven
inches--five to six inches is even better--and your paragraphs
shorter than seven lines of text each. Many people find it
difficult to cram the description of a job and its accomplishments
into a single paragraph while following this rule. Therefore,
you will often see bulleted sentences used instead of paragraphs
on résumés.
If you prefer
the paragraph style, there are some tricks of the trade that
can help you make your résumé more readable:
1. Divide
your experience into related information and use several
shorter paragraphs under each job description (Sample
1).
2. List the job summary in paragraph form and then use bullets to highlight
your achievements (Sample
1).
3. Use left headings instead of centered headings (Sample
1) or put dates in a left column (Sample
1) to make the line lengths shorter. This won't work, however,
when the shorter line length forces your information into very long paragraphs.
It is better to have longer line lengths and shorter paragraphs.
Full justification--where
all the lines end at the same place on the right margin--makes
paragraph-style résumés look more formal. Ragged right margins
generally give a more informal appearance. Full justification
creates a neater appearance any time the lines of text run
all of the way to the right margin, even in bulleted résumés.
However, you can choose either style and not go wrong. Again,
it is just a matter of your personal preference.
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