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I am a 16 year old school leaver. I left due to family problems and have no qualifications eg standard grades.

I am now making a CV for a job. I've got things to put under Personal Details, and Employment (I have done lots of jobs), but what do i put under education, or how do i get about telling the employer i have nothing,

I am applying for a simple admin assistant job.

A quick 10 points to first serious answer.

2006-12-13 21:33:36 · 15 answers · asked by mehboobahmad 2 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment

15 answers

Make sure you put your employment details at the top of your CV... this will be the part that the employer willl be interested in...your education can go at the bottom (just before hobbies etc). You can say that you attended so-and-so schools. Also have you ever gained any NVQ's or industry qualifications? safety? food hygene? till operation? Vocational qualifications can be put in education too.

Id order it like this

Personal info

Work experience

List some of your main acheivements at work, ie learnt IT skills or made lots of sales

Education
Any professional qualifications achevements
just list schools attended

Personal interests

References

Good luck mate!

2006-12-13 21:41:26 · answer #1 · answered by king_badger 3 · 0 0

Education should come way down the page. Order ot something like this:

Personal details: name address, phone number etc
Personal statement: This should be a short bullet pointed list of your most marketable skills and experience:
For example:

Experience in customer service
Excellent written and verbal communication skills
Good knowledge of the retail industry
IT Skills and good knowledge of MS Office and email systems
Etc etc etc

Then list your work history starting with the most recent. If any of the jobs were temp jobs then put this down so that the new employer does not think you just up and leave after a couiple of months.

When it comes to education, my suggestion is that you put just the school name and dates. Maybe even the subjects you studied - something like this:

Education:

19xx - 19xx XXX comprehensive school
German, Biology Mathematics

Then hobbies and referees.

I would also recommend missing off your date of birth from the CV.

Good luck. I know many people who have done very well without any formal qualifications. You just need to be prepared to put the work in now!

2006-12-13 21:45:07 · answer #2 · answered by Bellasmum 3 · 1 0

Many organisations these days want you to fill in their application forms, instead of sending a cv. When this happens, you have to complete the education section. There is always a section for additional comments, however, and I really think (as someone who does lots of interviews) that your best policy is to explain WHY you have no qualifications. Its much better that you have a reason, rather than let them think you couldn't be bothered or didn't try hard enough. Make sure you make the most of everything you have done - including hobbies and pastimes. Any team sports show that you can be a good team person, for example, so put everything. An experienced recruiter knows what to look for. Good luck.

2006-12-13 22:00:26 · answer #3 · answered by Queen of the Night 4 · 0 0

The CV must be designed in the way that is extremely friendly for interpretation and doesn’t look chaotic. You may not understand about this and your CV might look extremely appealing to yourself however this might send the total different communication to your potential recruiter. The second big reason this is being emphasized is because the expert CV writing services provider is more talented in setting up the accurate writing style and words for you. The CV is the very formal text and this is the need of the CV to get written down in the formal tone. This cannot have casual words, abbreviations and phrases. This must be the ideal sign of your character with the extremely powerful language of official proficiency.

2016-05-24 00:56:54 · answer #4 · answered by Sandra 4 · 0 0

26

2016-10-10 08:43:55 · answer #5 · answered by Delois Lassen 3 · 0 0

You can still say what schools you attended even if you didn't get any qualifications. You can say how long you studied subjects and if there's any vocational subjects you did mention those. Don't leave the education section blank, just say where you went to school and put lots about all the experience you'd had.

Good luck

2006-12-13 21:37:13 · answer #6 · answered by Andy M Thompson 5 · 1 0

Andy says it well. Write out the education institutes out under 'education'. You need not specify completed or not. When you're at the interview in person you could mention it, and I'm sure it'll be OK.

GoodLuck. Hope you get the Job.

2006-12-13 21:42:09 · answer #7 · answered by Yvonne Mystic 4 · 0 0

on a CV nover write in the first person, so never put 'i am a diverse driven etc etc' say instead 'a diverse driven etc etc'

under education include all certificates won, even if tehy are not academic.

make the cv one page only and begin with your individual statement to grab them by the balls, this is the most important bit.

don't use large font as they'll see through it.

2006-12-13 21:40:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Put the name of the school you attended down, and also state that you took no exams due to family problems etc.

You can alsways take your exams later.

2006-12-13 21:43:27 · answer #9 · answered by k 7 · 0 0

Emphasis relevent experience, if you have 0 GCSEs then I would suggest leaving off the 'education' section.

2006-12-13 21:38:34 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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