huskybuilder
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 9, 2010
- 24
Could someone offer me some advice on how my resume will look to potential employers? I graduated college in 2009 with a B.S. in Civil Engineering and took a job at a consultant who I had interned with one summer. I stayed at that job 21 months and then moved cross country for a job with a government agency. That was a huge mistake, mainly because I didn't know what I wanted. I thought I wanted to travel the country with that position, but I didn't. Also, the work was mainly administrative, not 'engineering.'
I left after 5 months with a late funding offer to grad school back in the region of the country I'm from. It's a year and a half funded program for an M.S. with a hydraulics emphasis that is thesis track. I'm not positive I want to work with hydraulics, but as I saw it, it was my best option to move in a direction I want and this was my best chance to get a hydraulics focused position if I decide I want to do that type of work. I'm kind of hoping I might be able to return to the first company now that I know more what I want, even though they don't do a lot of hydraulics work but time will tell. I would make a VERY firm commitment to them this time around.
Do I look like a flake?
I left after 5 months with a late funding offer to grad school back in the region of the country I'm from. It's a year and a half funded program for an M.S. with a hydraulics emphasis that is thesis track. I'm not positive I want to work with hydraulics, but as I saw it, it was my best option to move in a direction I want and this was my best chance to get a hydraulics focused position if I decide I want to do that type of work. I'm kind of hoping I might be able to return to the first company now that I know more what I want, even though they don't do a lot of hydraulics work but time will tell. I would make a VERY firm commitment to them this time around.
Do I look like a flake?