πŸ“„ Curriculum Vitae

A Curriculum Vitae (CV) is a comprehensive document that outlines an individual's academic background, professional experience, research output, teaching activities, honors, and affiliations.

Unlike a rΓ©sumΓ© (which is brief and targeted), a CV is extensive, detailed, and evolving β€” typically used in academic, research, and medical careers.

  • Personal Information – Name, contact details, academic titles.
  • Education – Degrees earned, institutions, dates.
  • Academic Appointments – Positions held in universities, hospitals, or research centers.
  • Publications – Peer-reviewed articles, books, chapters.
  • Conferences & Presentations – Talks, posters, invited lectures.
  • Grants & Funding – Research projects, roles, funding bodies.
  • Teaching Experience – Courses taught, student supervision.
  • Awards & Honors – Recognitions, fellowships.
  • Memberships – Societies, committees, working groups.
  • Languages, Skills, Certifications – Relevant competencies.

A CV can reflect:

  • πŸ“ˆ Substance – When it showcases meaningful work, originality, and clear progression.
  • πŸ’… Surface polish – When it becomes a performance of productivity (*see Glossy Curriculum Vitae*).
  • 🧱 Padding – When filled with honorary titles, irrelevant details, or co-authored consensus papers to create bulk.
A well-constructed CV should be accurate, honest, and relevant to the role it is being used for β€” not a catalogue of vanity metrics.

Bottom line: *A Curriculum Vitae should be a map of your intellectual journey β€” not a brochure for academic marketing.*

  • curriculum_vitae.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 20:46
  • by administrador