"Full-time Parent"
MrCreosote
144 Posts
A friend of mine asked me for resume advice and the first thing I noticed was that she had included in her professional experience, Full-time parent for two years. When I suggested she take it out, she said that one possible employer had already commented positively about it, that he appreciated her being straightforward about it. I have never seen that on a resume, but have seen plenty of gaps on resumes that generally mean the same thing. When you go through work history in an interview, it is bound to come out, anyway. What do you think?
Comments
Welcome back, Cinderella. x:-)
Not a big deal either way for me, but I don't think it belongs on the actual resume.
Generally speaking...age, marital status and number and ages of childern are needed to enroll EE's into insurance and pension programs once they have been hired, or for other legitimate business purposes after hire. But NEVER do you ask for any of this information from a job applicant.
Eventually the gap in employment would be addressed on its own. Therefore, my vote is to leave the "full time parent" comment off of the resume.
AND, depending on the position, one gains a ton of useful skills being a full time parent...budgeting of money and time, organizational skills, communication...
maybe it would depend upon the position for which i was hiring?
edit:
My hubby was a musician before he became a grownup...he did tours and the whole 9....but left this off of his resume when he decided to join the 9 to 5 world about 8 years ago...I finally convinced him to include it, eventhough it had no bearing on the jobs he sought, because it looked like he'd graduated from highschool and then nothing... It gave the appearance that he'd not been actively participating in life for 15 years!!
>he'd not been actively participating in life for
>15 years!!
Uh, no offense, Denise, but he really kind of wasn't...the lucky stiff.
I have often put resumes in the 'C' stack when the last job shown was over six months ago, and certainly if the last job was a year ago. I probably would wonder about a resume that had a year or more gap.
Like Hunter, I appreciate all the help I can get in resume interpretation and don't always want to make a list to clear up during an interview. I got this statement a few years ago on a resume and it was helpful, "Between Verizon and Sprint, I spent eleven months in Reno caring for my father who passed away." On the other hand, I'll never forget the cover letter that included date of hysterectomy and make of automobile.
I bet if there were a thread called "unwelcome info included in cover letters" we all would come up with some doozies.