Apr 13, 2013

CVs / Resumes

7 Tips for CVs/Resumes

When you apply for a job, you are usually asked to send a CV
or resume. This is a history of your education and work
experience. Here are 7 tips for CVs and resumes in English:

Tip 1: Use design that demands attention
Employers don't have time to read through each of your job
descriptions to know if you have the skills they need. The
design of your CV must do it for them. Your CV should be
concise, well-organised and relevant. It should emphasis
the most important and relevant points about your
experience, skills and education.

Tip 2: Use 'power words'
To control the image that an employer has of you, use power
words that match the position you want. Certain words are
used frequently by recruiters in their job descriptions. You
should study recruiters' advertisements and job descriptions
and use these words in your CV and covering letter.

Tip 3: A number is worth 1,000 words
Numbers are alive and powerful. They create images in our
minds. General statements are easy to ignore. Be specific!
Use numbers when describing your duties and achievements.

Tip 4: Put important information first
List important information at the beginning of your job
descriptions. Put statements in your CV in order of
importance, impressiveness and relevance to the job.

Tip 5: Sell benefits, not skills
Holiday companies don't sell holidays. They sell relaxation,
adventure, sun, sea and sand (the benefits of a holiday).
You should not sell your skills (many other people have the
same skills). You should sell the benefits of your skills.
When you write your skills and past duties, you can explain
their benefits to the employer.

Tip 6: Solve the employer's (hidden) needs
Employers want people who can solve problems, not create
them! Your CV and cover letter should show how you can solve
the employer's problems and needs.

Tip 7: Target the job
You will have more success if you adjust your CV and cover
letter for the specific skills an employer is seeking. This
means that you would write one CV for one particular job and
a different, modified, CV for another job.

All the best.

COULD U



"Could" is used to express possibility or past ability as well as to make suggestions and requests. "Could" is also commonly used in conditional sentences as the conditional form of "can."

Examples:

A. Extreme rain could cause the river to flood the city. - possibility

B. Nancy could ski like a pro by the age of 11. - past ability

c. You could see a movie or go out to dinner. - suggestion

D Could I use your computer to email my boss? - request

E. We could go on the trip if I didn't have to work this weekend. - conditional

Using "Could" in Present, Past, and Future

Most modal verbs behave quite irregularly in the past and the future. Study the chart below to learn how "could" behaves in different contexts.

Modal Use Positive Forms
1. = Present 2. = Past 3. = Future Negative Forms 
1. = Present 2. = Past 3. = Future You can also use:

could - possibility : u can also use may and might.
Positive. 
1. John could be the one who stole the money.
2. John could have been the one who stole the money.
3. John could go to jail for stealing the money. 

Negative:
1. Mary couldn't be the one who stole the money.
2. Mary couldn't have been the one who stole the money.
3. Mary couldn't possibly go to jail for the crime.

could - conditional of can

Positive: 1. If I had more time, I could travel around the world.
2. If I had had more time, I could have traveled around the world.
3. If I had more time this winter, I could travel around the world.

Negative: 1. Even if I had more time, I couldn't travel around the world.
2. Even if I had had more time, I couldn't have traveled around the world.
3. Even if I had more time this winter, I couldn't travel around the world.

could - suggestion: 1. NO PRESENT FORM
2. You could have spent your vacation in Hawaii.
3. You could spend your vacation in Hawaii. 

NO NEGATIVE FORMS 

could - past ability: ( be able to )

1. I could run ten miles in my twenties.
2. I could speak Chinese when I was a kid.

"Could" cannot be used in positive sentences in which you describe a momentary or one-time ability.

Yesterday, I could lift the couch by myself. - Not Correct

Negative:
1. I couldn't run more than a mile in my twenties.
2. I couldn't speak Swahili.

"Could" can be used in negative sentences in which you describe a momentary or one-time ability.

Yesterday, I couldn't lift the couch by myself. - Correct

could - polite request: Requests usually refer to the near future. ( u can use can and may instead of could ) 

Positive: 1. Could I have something to drink?
2. Could I borrow your stapler?

Negative:
1. Couldn't he come with us?
2. Couldn't you help me with this for just a second?

REMEMBER: "Could not" vs. "Might not"
"Could not" suggests that it is impossible for something to happen. "Might not" suggests you do not know if something happens.

Examples:
1. Jack might not have the key. Maybe he does not have the key.
2. Jack could not have the key. It is impossible that he has the key.

Apr 9, 2013

"Better to reign in hell than serve in heaven"

It is from John Milton's Paradise Lost...though most people only know it because it is quoted in the Star Trek Episode SPACE SEED, It is the line that the Satan screams as he is thrown down from Heaven into the fiery pit of Hell. 

In it Milton encapsulates why people choose damnation. It is Satan's sin of pride. Satan is so tied up in his pride, so enslaved by his pride, that he won't give it up, even if it means eternal damnation. He can't give it up and remain who he is... so rather than change who he is, he chooses an eternity of pain and torture...because he prefers that to swallowing his pride and submitting himself to the will of God.

better to serve in heaven than to reign in hell
better to be a servant and make it to heaven
than to be a master and go to hell


Does this apply to life? Yes, I think it often does. We're all stubborn now and then and like to have our way, even if it means suffering for a time. We all reject the sour grapes, even though they really aren't sour. Our pride makes us condemn them as sour. Every dammed soul makes the same choice. They are tied to their politics, or there routine life, or their lust, or their greed, or their money, or their hate, or their sense of intellectual superiority. Whatever they are tied to, it is something that they will not give up, at any cost.

All the best.