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How to List a Master’s Degree You Just Started on a Resume

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Career

How to List a Master’s Degree You Just Started on a Resume

If you are working on a degree you have not yet received; there are graceful ways of including that in your resume. You do want to include it because whether you have completed the degree or not, you have already achieved skills and knowledge you would not have if you had not gone to graduate school at all.

Tip

The purpose of a resume is to provide a summary of your skills, abilities and accomplishments. It is a quick advertisement of who you are. It is a “snapshot” of you with the intent of capturing and emphasizing interests and secure you an interview. It is not an autobiography.

What’s the Purpose of a Resume?

If you are wondering whether you should include in your resume an MA degree you are still working on, or one you started working on some time ago and discontinued, it helps to think of a resume’s purpose.

Your resume should put your best foot forward by presenting a concise summary of skills you have and things that you have accomplished that may be of value to your employer. The idea is not to provide a minibiography but to help your employer understand why it is in her best interests to hire you for the available job.

You surely want to avoid claiming a degree you don’t have – the news accounts of various high-profile individuals who have been caught out doing that make clear why that’s a terrible idea. So be sure, when you list your degree in progress that you make clear it is something you are working on or worked on some time ago but have not yet received_._

On the other hand, you are trying to put your best foot forward. If you are presently working on an MA, you have already gained knowledge and skills that can benefit your employer. Even if you started an MA sometime in the past and quit before earning the degree, the coursework you completed or the work you began on your thesis gives you a knowledge-and-skills advantage over another applicant without any graduate-student credentials at all_._ You should include that graduate work in your resume.

How to Include a Degree in Progress on Your Resume

When you include work toward a degree you have not yet received on your resume, it pays to be precise. As to how you present the information formally, you have a couple of options. Your resume includes a degree section where you can list the unfinished degree.

Example:

Bachelor of Arts (Education Major): University of California, Berkeley, 2008-2012

Master of Arts in Education (in progress): University of San Diego, 2013-present

On the other hand, if you began the degree some years ago and then discontinued it, you should make clear that while you do have abilities and knowledge related to your graduate studies, you are not currently progressing toward the MA. It can go in the degree section as well.

Example:

Bachelor of Arts (Education Major): University of California, Berkeley, 2001-2005

Graduate studies in Education: University of San Diego, 2007-2008

Brevity Is the Soul of Wit

It’s been more than 400 years since Shakespeare assigned these famous words to Hamlet, but they are relevant still. Hamlet, unfortunately, did not take his own advice and rambled on –however eloquently – a little too long. You, however, will not make the same mistake.

While it’s tempting to get into explaining why you have not yet completed your graduate degree, it is not necessarily a great idea to dwell on it. For one thing, if the explanation results in your resume extending past a single page, you may be testing your prospective employer’s patience. After plowing through a few dozen excruciatingly detailed multipage resumes, your employer will surely appreciate why your one-page exercise in brevity is the soul of wit and a good sign that you are a disciplined kind of person with the proper respect for your prospective employer’s time.

Also, you have already put the essential info out there in the education section. If it needs further detail, your prospective employer can bring it up as a question in the interview. Getting into why you dropped out of the graduate program comes off less like useful information and more like being defensive about it.

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