Resume and Cover Letter

Due Dates: Requirements:
Working draft: December 14, 1999
Final draft: December 21,1999
in by 3pm
(This is your final exam.)
  • Two cover letters (1 p. each)
  • Two resumes differing in content or layout or in both. (1 p. each)
  • A cover memo (2-3 pp. dbl spaced)

The cover memo should provide an overview of the two jobs for which you are applying, a description of what you know about the two employers, and an explanation of how you have adapted your resume and cover letter to address the expectations of these two different employers. This information will be important to you as you write cover letters to these two employers.

You will choose two job listings from the standard job resources available on campus or on the Internet. This will be your first step, because you will be tailoring resumes and letters for these two jobs. The two jobs you choose should be different enough to require you to emphasize different parts of your experience to qualify for the positions.

Resumes describe your qualifications for a specific type of job. You will send the same resume out to different employers for a single type of job, but the resume should change if the type of job changes. The contents of both of these resumes will overlap somewhat, but there will also be many differences to accentuate your suitability for the different types of jobs.

Cover letters are tailored to specific employers. Stronger cover letters make references to specific characteristics of the employer and the job for which you are applying. Weaker cover letters are those that look like a form letter in which you have simply changed the names and addresses.

These letters follow a standard format beginning with an introductory paragraph that explains why you are writing. Explain that you are looking for a particular kind of job and that you would like such a job at that particular company. Then present those of you qualifications that particularly suit you for this job. In the body of the letter, develop these qualifications with the use of evidence. This section should show that you know what the company needs and that you have got what they are looking for. The closing of the letter should invite a response.

IMPORTANT: By the way, typographical and mechanical errors in letters and resumes will really hurt your chances of getting the job. If I find more than two such errors, I will decrease the final grade for the assignment by one letter grade.


John D. Schwetman, Composition 3110, Fall 1999