Thanks for all the quick feedback
I'm slightly confused over the 03-09, and how important it was. Judging by it being alongside uni + college, I'm thinking it's something like Purple shirts or the such like? May be wrong, but that's my guess?
Not very important at all, just supermarket work. Only in there to fill the time gaps and show that I wasn't dossing around during the school holidays.
I might consider moving IT Skills/Certificates further up, and above employment history, and then make 09-present job as first page, and the 03-09 and 01 jobs on the other side as they don't seem too important...
I'll admit, I haven't had huge experience with CV's, but I've written a few, and my general thoughts are that most companies won't do more than skim the first page, so they need to know what IT skills you have at a quick glance (presuming that's what you're applying for)
I thought about moving it to the first page too, but decided against it for a couple of reason; 1) that would interrupt the employment timeline, 2) it's not massively impressive!
[FnG]magnolia;22263644 said:
e : It's very blocky and the 'all of which I was awarded a grade A' sentence in the Education section doesn't flow properly. Always lead with your strongest line so swap "I was project manager on ..." with "Participated in ..." (also change 'participated' to something more engaging).
I'll looking at re-wording that bit. Any pointers on making it less blocky? I do agree, but making it less blocky generally involves cutting out content - it's trying to find the right balance.
[FnG]magnolia;22263644 said:
What happened between your Maths GCSE and your Maths A Level? That's a hell of a drop! I'm not having a go, just curious.
Yea I know, worst result I ever got. Should really have re-taken it - I didn't care at the time as I already got into uni. I had to take my Maths A-level in the evening after a full day's college an my tutor was Italian and didn't speak great English. I was oncourse for a low B/high C but royally messed up a module that was my banker module

. Can't really think of a way to disguise it either, unless I remove grades completely - but I'm pretty happy with all my other grades.
[FnG]magnolia;22263644 said:
The lady who heads up our HR has a particular thing for the 'Additional Information' section of CVs and it is the one place, in her estimation, where you can really be you.
When reading sample CV's I always find things along those lines a bit unprofessional tbh, especially the example you gave. But then again I'm not in the business of reading CV's so maybe I should listen to someone who does!
[FnG]magnolia;22263644 said:
Finally, tell me more about your voluntary work experience. That's a great chance to show character.
I avoided this as I didn't want to ramble on about too much that's unrelated. I would have thought this is the kind of things people would bring up in an interview rather than expect to be explained in the CV itself.
It doesn't say what programming languages are involved anywhere.
It's for a testing job, and I'm currently a tester, so languages don't really come into it much, and te few I have experienced are mentioned in the 'IT Skills section'
The job description is a bit "dead", it reads like your formal job description, rather than a CV.
Did you work with other people? Where's the description of how you meet your own description. You say you have problem solving abilities, where's the evidence in the CV? What new technologies did you introduce? What were the benefits of doing so?
I agree, and to be honest most of the points are pulled and re-worded from job descriptions - but they are relevant. I started to give evidence on some of the points but I found it hard to do succinctly which meant taking out some of the other info. I was thinking that these are the kind of things I could expand on in the interview, or maybe in the covering letter if possible.