What Is A CV and What Should It Include?: Information Sheet
What Is A CV and What Should It Include?: Information Sheet
gg CVs are focused on academic work with an emphasis on research and teaching
gg CVs aim to provide comprehensive information
gg CVs are often long: five, 10, 20 or more pages
The terms résumé and CV are sometimes used interchangeably. However, a résumé is used for work search, and a
CV is used when applying for contracts, advanced research or post-secondary teaching positions. For those who
use the two terms synonymously, the terms “academic résumé” or “academic CV” are often used to differentiate
advanced research and post-secondary teaching documents.
As you progress through your program, your CV and résumé should become clearly differentiated documents.
Required information
✛✛ Personal contact information: This forms the header of your CV and includes your name, address, phone numbers and
email. Make sure you have a professional email address and voicemail message.
Optional information
✛✛ Objective: This is a brief statement at the beginning of your CV that focuses on how you can contribute to your field of
practice.
✛✛ Summary or profile: This is a brief section near the beginning of your CV that includes four to six statements that strongly
connect you to the work or educational experience you are seeking. Often you will include statements describing your
specifically related competencies and accomplishments. Think of this as a summary of the key points from your cover letter.
✛✛ Professional service: This is a list of academic committees that you have belonged to, as well as your contributions to
professional organizations (e.g., Graduate Student Society, graduate student representative on academic committees,)
✛✛ Competencies (skills, knowledge and attributes): Competencies are your skills, knowledge and attributes related to the work
you are seeking and are best presented as bulleted statements beginning with action verbs (such as “developed”, “created”,
and “supervised”, etc.) that describe your accomplishments in clear, concrete terms. Traditionally, competencies are only
minimally articulated on a CV.
✛✛ Relevant work experience: This includes a summary of work experience that is relevant to your current goal. Check the
application to determine if this section is required or if it would add value to your CV. If so, include your co-op work terms
and other experiences like internships, practicums or spectific projets. Alternately, you could integrate this into your research
and teaching sections.
Section/area Completed?
Required on a CV
Education
Professional affiliations
Research interests
Research experience
Teaching experience
References
Optional on a CV
Objective
Summary or profile
Professional service
Competencies