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My fraternity is my career. Being a Leadership Consultant has been an incredible experience. I've got another year left, so I'll have a better answer after that.
As to your other question in terms of resumes - Include anything that involves numbers/statistics as in "Recruitment chair for XYZ - Recruited 15 new members and raised membership 50%" |
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I would never list my greek affiliation on a resume, but I did occasionally mention when I was interviewing for my first job.
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I can't tell you how many times I've been doing something in my professional life and thought my 4 years in collegiate sorority life directly helped me with that task (working a cocktail party is the biggest one). But I don't think it directly helped me GET a job. And within a couple years of graduating all that would have gone off my resume anyway.
A sorority sister is a recruiter for a big company and she mentioned that she has hired a couple sisters, but I think it was just a point of conversation, not an actual decision maker. |
I have it on my resume and have definitely been asked about it in interviews for internships.
The other thing I list on my resume is benefit event I was in charge of for a service group I was once in (without directly listing the group since I am no longer active in it) but it's something I'm really proud of. I also increased our donated total by 60%. Employers are impressed by something concrete you did and many companies love to see philanthropic efforts. I'm convinced that is what got me this internship. Greek life is all about philanthropy. I'd say, if you did something worth talking about during your collegiate years (and have recently - last 7 yrs) graduated, then put it on there. How else are you going to almost guarantee that it will be brought up? |
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Also, I think it depends on the situation. (for 3, not 7...lol) |
For my career, Greek affiliation definitely helped initially. There is a section on the medical school admission application for extracurricular activities. I was able to fill the section with double filling each space with information about the activities and honors I'd received that were directly a result of my membership in AOII. When I actually went for interviews, I remember seeing my application on my interviewers desk and there was a big exclamation mark next to that section. He specifically asked me how I was able to keep up my GPA while being so active on campus. Medical schools are looking for well rounded students, not just bookworms, so this was a direct benefit.
Now, I'm 18 years out of membership. I do list my affiliation with AOII on my CV. I mention that I am a member of an alumnae chapter, perform community service, mentor collegiate students and work with our international foundation. If is is something you are still doing, it is definitely appropriate to place on your resume/CV after your first job. |
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The last few comments were unnecessary. You asked, I answered. When I asked my question I was referring to the type of greek affiliations you all are a part of. It was never misleading. I would never include PTK on a resume unless I was seeking a government based job which in case would put me in the running for a higher pay grade.
Yes I am an aspirant but this post has nothing to do in my journey there. I wanted replies from people about their experiences. Again thanks to those who have replied. |
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Sometimes it is best to be a silent observer. This is GreekChat, not AspirantChat. |
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