Federal Resume (United States) - Resume Education

In the United States of America, a federal resume is a type of résumé constructed specifically to apply for Federal government jobs. Like a private sector resume, it contains a summary or listing of relevant job experience and education. A Federal resume is one of three documents accepted as an official application for position vacancies within the Federal government. The other two are the OF-612 and the traditional SF-171. The SFâ"171 is considered obsolete, no longer accepted by most government agencies.

Job Information (Announcement number, title, series and grade of job for which applying)
Personal Information (Full name, mailing address w/ zip code, day and evening phone numbers w/ area code, social security #, country of citizenship, veteranâs preference, reinstatement eligibility, highest Federal civilian grade held)
Education (High school: name, city, and state, date of diploma or GED, Colleges or universities: name, city and state, majors, type and year of any degrees received)
Work Experience (Job title, duties and accomplishments, employerâs name and address, supervisorâs name and phone number, starting and ending dates, hours per week, salary, indicate whether we may contact your current supervisor)
Other Qualifications (Job-related training courses, skills, certificates and licenses, honors, awards and special accomplishments; for example, publications, memberships in professional or honor societies, l eadership activities, public speaking and performance awards)
A federal resume should cover the last ten years of employment history and, with few exceptions, should be three to five pages long when printed. When applying to federal government positions, KSA statements are sometimes required in addition to a federal resume, but in most cases, should be included in the text of your resume. The commonly accepted Outline Format resume, developed by Kathryn Troutman in the 1990s, uses short paragraphs to describe duties and bulleted lists of accomplishments to illustrate KSAs.
Many USAJOBS announcements are time-sensitive. The process of creating your federal resume for the first time and gaining access to the various elements of the USAJOBS application system and any companion systems can take upwards of 2 hours. Successful candidates get familiar with the system and its components and have a basic resume built in the system that they can they adjust when they see a vacancy announcement of interest.
Think of your federal resume as a "paper interview", this allows government HR specialists and hiring officials to get a detailed vision of your talents, skills and concrete examples of your past work.
References
External links
- USAJobs.gov - Federal Resume Writing Tips
- Sample Federal Resume
- Federal Government Worker Resume
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