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www.careers.utoronto.ca How to Look for Summer Work Engineering Science Felicity Morgan, M.Ed. March 10, 2005
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Workshop Goals To develop a targeted action plan for your summer work search. Determine your goals Review effective job search methods Discuss résumés and cover letters Provide an overview of Career Centre services
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www.careers.utoronto.ca What type of work do I want? Identify your needs: Experience Financial Time and Flexibility Location: Local, another city, international Skills Development Personal Interest
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Job Search Methods Passive Newspapers Career Centre Government programs Websites Agencies Active Network Family, friends, professors, former employers Professional associations Cold calls
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www.careers.utoronto.ca How do I find it? Government Programs/Internships Job Postings - Career Centre Network Research
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Government Programs/Internships FSWEP www.jobs.gc.ca Ontario Government Summer Student Hiring http://youthjobs.gov.on.ca/eng.html Summer Company (Ontario website above) See Summer Work Search tipsheet for more
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Career Centre Summer Employment Listings Only U of T students and recent grads Basic/Advanced search screen Delisted positions http://www.careers.utoronto.ca
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Geographical Search The National Job Bank http://jb-ge.hrdc-drhc.gc.ca Canada WorkInfonet http://www.workinfonet.ca Workopoliscampus (formerly CampusWorklink) http://campus.workopolis.com http://campus.workopolis.com Employer Directories Network
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www.careers.utoronto.ca How Employers Hire 5. Ads / postings ---------- 4. Unsolicited resumes ---------- 3. Screened applicants: Agencies, Search firm ---------- 2. Networking contacts/offers proof ---------- 1. From within The way a typical job- hunter likes to hunt for a job (starts here) The way a typical employer prefers to fill vacancies (starts here) Source: Bolles, What Color Is Your Parachute
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Networking – What is it? Develop layers of contacts 6 degrees removed from information you want
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Who Do You Know? YOU ClassmateTeammateFriendsNeighbourTeacherFamily Company Insider Your New Boss Colleague Friend’s Friend
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Once You have the Contacts… Who you are, why you are contacting him or her Your specific, relevant skills and or experiences “Hi Mr. Brown, my name is… and I am calling to inquire about summer positions with your firm. Do you have a few minutes to speak with me? I have previous experience in a manufacturing setting, working on the product line…″
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Research - Industry Specific Delisted jobs Network Employer Directories Professional Associations Job Fairs Faculty/Department notices
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Places on Campus to Look for Work University of Toronto Libraries Food Services Athletic Centre Hart House Second Cup Departmental offices, Student Services offices
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Going Abroad Start early (i.e. one year in advance) Link with a specific program such as IASTE, AISEC, SWAP For more information see Going Abroad tipsheet and the International Student Centre
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Prepare Your Résumé Purpose: to get the interview Know what you have to offer employer Tailor it to field: RELEVANT and concrete Content and format are both important: Keep It Simple
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Your Skills Come From….. Part-time Work Volunteer Work Academic Work Extra Curricular Summer Work
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Résumé Formats Chronological Modified Chronological Functional/Skills
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Résumé Components Contact info Education Awards and Achievements Technical/computer skills Project work
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Résumé Components – Part 2 Experience; paid and unpaid Extracurricular activities Interests References Optional: objective, skills summary
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Résumé Fine-Tuning Use action words Focus on results/impact Quantify examples Maximum 2 pages; 1 page is often sufficient Quality of paper Font size
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www.careers.utoronto.ca E-mail and Electronic Résumé E-mail: be specific in the subject header Options: use plain text in e-mail body, send via attachment, use PDF file Create a signature file Check e-mail regularly All the same rules apply
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Web Forms Cut and paste résumé into text boxes Answer questions on specific skills, qualifications, levels of experience or achievements Treat like interview questions; don’t assume they will make the leap for you
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Scannable Résumés Simple presentation: no fancy fonts, graphics, lines, coloured paper etc. Use key words to describe your experiences; see job description Left justify Avoid punctuation Use spacing
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Résumé Checklist Does your résumé look appealing? Does it highlight your relevant skills, abilities and experiences? Are there any grammatical mistakes, typos or misused words? Have you had it critiqued by other people?
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Cover Letters Focus on the top 2-3 relevant skills Clear, specific and concise Make link: your skills and employer needs Include what you know about the employer No typos, run on sentences, grammar mistakes Have it critiqued by someone else
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www.careers.utoronto.ca The Interview Review your résumé, your relevant skills and experience Prepare concrete, relevant examples: STAR Research employer and the job Practice Smile!
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Other Career Centre Services to Help You Career Resource Library Career Centre Workshops Résumé Clinic Practice Interviews Career Talk
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www.careers.utoronto.ca Action Plan Identify priorities Check government programs and web postings regularly Develop my network and work on intro speech Have my résumé critiqued Practice interview questions
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Best of Luck www.careers.utoronto.ca 214 College St. 416-978-8000
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