Artifacts that are related to the theme of your grant proposal. Did you have professional dev. that is related. Have you engaged your students or fellow teachers in a project that is related. Any professional development that was taken or given by you shows leadership. Grantors want leaders.
2007-05-18 15:36:37
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, I suggest that you should include these items in your resume: *Objective (what your goals are or what you want to achieve in your workplace), *Job Experience (List down your work experiences with your job description), the *Government/Licensure Examinations you've passed, *Educational Background (where you graduated, and honors received, etc), *Trainings you've undergone, *Seminars you've attended, *Achievements, and list down some *Personal Details that may help like what languages you speak, and some impressive *Character References
Good Luck!!!!
2007-05-18 16:00:27
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answer #2
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answered by Tina 3
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My principal told me the most important category she looks for is "Educational Leadership". There you include any sort of committee work you've done, curriculum development, advocacy, SIP teams, mentoring, etc. As for the grant, I would highlight the areas that fit with the grant or organization's purpose.
2007-05-22 19:00:56
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answer #3
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answered by chilena12 5
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I unquestionably have a certification section and aspect out what state i'm qualified in and what section are my endorsments. This makes it very sparkling to human beings attempting to employ a particular individual. you are able to purely prepare what you're qualified in.
2016-11-04 09:48:34
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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hi check this link its good
http://25keysforgoodresume.blogspot.com/
.
2007-05-21 04:55:46
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answer #5
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answered by uma j 1
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probly sumthing like PICK ME! PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!PICK ME!!!! lol... honesly i have no idea..
2007-05-18 15:04:38
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answer #6
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answered by Taylor Reed 2
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