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What the Interviewer looks for?
Academic Performance
relevance of the degree to the job – is it an exact match or is there a degree
of flexibility needed;
quality of secondary school results – not just the TER but the balance of
subjects ie: humanities : maths/science and particularly the English mark;
quality of tertiary results – some may apply a grade point average criteria,
however, most recognise it is a combination of factors and will discount failures if
a logical reason is given. The range of
subjects and whether grade averages are improving over time or declining are
important. Variances between university courses are also taken into account.
academic achievement – such things as awards, scholarships, dean’s honours
list, post-graduate study, etc., will receive some brownie points in the right circles
Now for the Balancing Act – Personal Development
team orientation – the issue here is the extent to which a student seeks out and
participates in team involvement both sport and non-sport and not only when they
have been forced into it in university assignments. It might be achieved on the
sporting field or in extra-curricular activities or at work. They need to realize that
even if they haven’t done much then it is never too late to start – stamp collecting,
reading, bushwalking and surfing the internet as your only interests will not win
the day. The continuum of team based activity from school to uni/work is also
considered – many students are involved at school when they have to and drop
all activity when the leave school. Activities that stretch and place demands on
them will also invariably outweigh basic social activity.
demonstration of leadership – note the small ’l’ in leadership. A student
doesn’t have to be school captain or president of something. What is being
looked for here is how prepared they are to take the front running on things that
are important to them, take the initiative and be proactive. Students far too often
hide their light under a bushel – they should be encouraged to express in their
resume when they have been a self-starter, independent and self reliant, eg:
maybe they have travelled or been given responsibility at some stage – how did it
develop them, what did they learn from it - these are the issues they need to sell.
involvement in extra-curricular activity – do they just study, do some part-time
work and socialize with friends like the majority of the student population or do
they do things that develop their personal skills in organizing, planning,
communication, business acumen, influencing & negotiating. If they don’t, then
they should start now – it really curries favour with employers. It doesn’t have to
be at uni and it should be fun - if they play tennis, join the match committee; if
they like bird-watching!! join the club committee; if they are concerned for others,
join a community/charity group – but, for goodness sake. get off your backside
and be proactive.
relevant work experience – all work experience is well regarded. However, the
more relevant it is to the job for which they are applying, the more value will be
placed on it, eg: jobs that have a lot of customer service involvement are
considered highly, particularly if they are applying for a role that requires dealing
with others. Again, what they need to sell in their resume are the skills they have
learned from the experience and how it relates to the employer’s graduate role.
career reasoning – this is where the reviewer will look across the combination of
education, work experience, personal interests and activities to gauge the extent
to which they point towards stated career goals and the employer’s job
opportunities. Is there a common thread – a student can input to their thinking by
talking about this inter-relationship in their resume – it is all about being creative.
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