Thursday, November 30, 2006

Objective: Remove filler from resumes...

Here is a link to a fascinating discussion about job applicant resumes, started by blogger and law professor Eugene Volokh.

If law firms can reasonably require single-page resumes from second-year law students, we think the same is possible for students in their last year of high school.

Some choice remarks from the discussion:
  • College students also get a lot of screwy advice. I was pretty much ordered to include an "Objective" on my resume, and I still don't know what good it's supposed to do. At least the keywords list will help with scanned resumes... but who even reads the objective, anyway?
  • I've found the same rule applies to people who say they are "quick learners", or that they have "good interpersonal skills" or "good math skills" or "knowledge of Excel." (I work in quantitative finance, and I'm currently trying to hire a C++ programmer, so, I'm seeing a lot of these). If they say that, then no, they aren't. The people who really know something don't bother to put such vague or low-level skills. The people who say they have "good math skills" usually got a B in their one calculus class 10 years ago. The people who are actually good might list a published paper or a couple courses in real analysis, but if asked they will say they are dissatisfied with their math skills.
  • A 2L going through on-campus recruiting at a top school with a multi-page resume is going to look like an idiot.

We're not sayin'... we just sayin'.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

News of the day


In our opinion, it was a case of either they had to charge him with a crime or give him a medal. The IU student who pointed out an airline security loophole isn't going to get into any trouble. Let's hope the FBI offers him a job!

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

We're back

We've been remiss lately, but really it's because the weather has been so unseasonably glorious around here. Thanksgiving Day in Bloomington, and the temperature was in the mid-60's...

However, goodbye to all that. They say the weather is going to turn nasty and cold, and just in time for the end of the semester too. Probably better for keeping the students indoors and focussed on their studies. Check with your student - this is the time of year when lots of them run low on meal points. Remind them that the first night of finals week (Monday, Dec. 11) there will be free food in the Herman B Wells Library, courtesy of the College of Arts and Sciences. 10 p.m. - be there.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Here's hoping!

Readers of this blog will know that we are big fans of the IU football coach, Terry Hoeppner. Today is the IU-Purdue game, and our son is off to West Lafayette with a bunch of friends, to cheer on the Hoosiers. If IU wins today, that means the first trip to a bowl game since 1993. That is one long post-season drought.

So here's to IU, to Coach Hep, and to the Hoosier team. Bring home the Old Oaken Bucket!

The Admissions game

If you are reading this, then you probably have at least one child already in college. Remember the application and decision-making process? Wasn't that fun? For this year's students and parents, suddenly the received wisdom has changed.

Our take is this: if you are 17 or 18 years old and you cannot keep your resume of awards and activities to one side of a single sheet of paper, well, frankly... we agree with the person quoted in that article. When do you sleep? Have you slept at all in the past four years? Had any fun? More to the point, what will happen when you get to college? Will you do the "crash-and-burn" or will you keep going at this frantic rate?

Our father was a university professor and the best piece of advice he ever gave us was this: "Enjoy these years and take advantage of the whole range of experiences that are open to you. Have some fun." And this, mind you, was when we were starting our junior year. Of high school.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Sign of the times

It had to happen... Starbucks opened a store on campus today, its "first" one at IU, according to the paper. Wonder how many they plan?

No one loves Starbucks more than we do, but we are beginning to think our son was right, the one who said: "Pretty soon they are going to open Starbucks inside of Starbucks."

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Martinsville reconsidered


We have a fondness for lemon drops - especially the hard-to-find old-fashioned sour kind that you used to buy for a penny apiece and eat out of a little white paper sack. We found some of those yesterday in a most unexpected place - downtown Martinsville - as we made a spontaneous detour on the way home from Indianapolis.

We grew up in Bloomington and have made the trip around Martinsville countless times on our way elsewhere, but yesterday was our first time ever venturing into this tiny (population ~13,000) and relatively poverty-stricken metropolis. Our first time! Say "Martinsville" to almost anyone in Bloomington and the reaction will inevitably be: "Ku Klux Klan." Granted, there was a notorious killing there in the 60's that had strong racial overtones. There are also countless apocryphal stories told by people who have passed through the place (and by people who know people who said they passed through the place, if you catch our drift), about racist comments and threats they received. There may be some truth to these rumors, but consider for a moment that the town's terrible reputation may not be entirely deserved. After all, it is hardly the only place in the country where racist events are known to have taken place, nor is it the worst.

More to the point, Martinsville has a lot of - dare we say it - charm to recommend it to tourists. We parked on the square and walked past several curio and gift shops on our way to Ruby's Diner, where we had lunch (GREAT onion rings - another one of our culinary weaknesses). Friendly service, too. We weren't the only ones there and in fact we ran into a colleague who works at the IU School of Medicine, enjoying lunch there with her mother. Many of the downtown stores feature books and products touting favorite son John Wooden.

Coach Wooden was born in Martinsville in 1910 and played hoops for Martinsville High. Paul V. McNutt, the former governor of Indiana whose name graces one of the more popular residence halls at IU, is another native of the town .

Who knew? The place has four or five excellent antiques shops, including the old jailhouse, which has been converted into Jail Bird Antiques, complete with a tea room. And it is not the only tea room in town. There is even a tiny artists' colony beginning to take root.

Our favorite find of the day has to have been the Martinsville Candy Kitchen, also located on the square. That's where we found the lemon drops that we've been happily sucking on ever since. Their signature product is hand-made candy canes, but they also make many chocolate products, as well as a variety of fudge. We can't eat chocolate but we bought some fudge to bring home for the kids. The owner heard us talking as we paid for our purchases and pointed out a bag of lemon candy he had made. Looks like small bits of yellow candy cane, but he promised us it was all lemon-flavored and not lemony-mint. We bought the bag (for a whopping $1.49) and once we have made our way through the lemon drops, we are looking forward to that treat.

As we took our change, the young woman who rang up our purchases said, "You come back and see us soon." And we plan to... those are some tasty lemon drops.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Wonder if they celebrate Festivus...

Religious blasphemy or legal loophole? You decide.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Who's YOUR SecDef?

We mean: Hoosier SecDef. Robert Gates, who will be taking over from Donald Rumsfeld as President Bush's Secretary of Defense, has a degree from IU.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Indiana's 9th Congressional District

Bloomington lies in one of those hotly contested districts they've been talking so much about. Democrat Baron Hill is trying to regain the seat he lost to Republican Mike Sodrel two years ago.
We voted first thing this morning, and we mean FIRST THING - we were at our polling place at 6:02 a.m. And we were happy to see a young friend of ours, call him M, who is an IU senior this year and who is working at the polling place all day today.

The polling place was clean, large, well-lit, well-organized, with plenty of available parking; lines were already forming at 6 a.m. despite a driving rain; voting was fast and peaceable. The machines seemed to work just fine. Here's hoping things go as well all over the country.

Monday, November 06, 2006

You make me wanna DANCE

Zowie. This year's IU dance marathon participants raised a more than $920,000 for Riley Children's Hospital. This is a record for the annual fund raising event!

Will blog for planet


IU associate professor of biophysics and all-around brain-y guy John Beggs has joined the blogosphere, keeping his finger on the pulse of the planet.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Making us proud to be Hoosiers

We hope you clicked through all those news stories about the student who exposed a loophole in airline security procedures. He's an IU student!