Hi, I am wondering if the addendum section (aka "Other Information") will be an appropriate place to write a diversity statement, since Emory provides no specifically designated space for that. Any advice will be helpful :)
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Keep it to a page, though.
YES. Best advice.
DO NOT DO NOT DO NOT DO NOT GO OVER 1 PAGE!!!!!!
Could you please elaborate on this? I've come across this article: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/articles/2017-02-02/a-law-school-resume-that-made-the-cut, which pinpointed that you don't have to abide by the 1-page limit
A big thanks to everyone who posted (I haven't figured out how to reply individually sorry). A lot of the comments really strike home on the deficiencies of my strategies. I guess I will have to adopt a more aggressive mindset and practice more!
Upon reviewing my technique, I guess I got carried away by the information, especially in difficult passages, and placed less emphasis on the reasoning structures. Advice on how to avoid this will be helpful too :)
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@ It's just a professional convention. To be honest, I'm not sure why its a thing, but every employer I've ever had has told me to keep my resume to one page..
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
Keep it to a page, though.
YES. Best advice.
DO NOT DO NOT DO NOT DO NOT GO OVER 1 PAGE!!!!!!
Could you please elaborate on this? I've come across this article: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/articles/2017-02-02/a-law-school-resume-that-made-the-cut, which pinpointed that you don't have to abide by the 1-page limit
The 7sage admission course suggests that you should keep it to a page unless you're an exceptional personal.
Thanks for providing the background info. Opinions of different consulting services really diverge on this one