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Military Transition: Resume Concepts

Military Transition: Resume Concepts What you don’t do in the military: write resumes, interview for a job (normally), and you never negotiate salary and compensation. What you will do during your transition is write resumes, interview for a job and negotiate salary and compensation. Can you imagine negotiating compensation for your next tour of duty? “Ma’am I am really interested in your offer but can you arrange for me to telecommute on Fridays and get me a free membership at the country club?” And that is not the only hurdle you may have to overcome…some employers have a few ill-perceived notions about you and the military: You are rigid You don’t understand profit and loss   You have had unlimited resources   Leading is easy because you just give orders These misled perceptions can create barriers, but a well prepared and focused resume will dispel all of these notions and set you up for success. An effective way to create the building blocks of yo...

Meet Tara Brown: Working Mother and eMajor Student

Tara Brown with her husband and two children. Tara Brown, 39 School: Dalton State College Major:  Organizational Leadership Expected Graduation: May 2016 Why is completing your college degree important to you? I feel that having a degree makes you more competitive in a job search. It’s also a sense of accomplishment to finish my degree because no one else in my family has a degree. What are your career goals? I am lucky that I already have a great job. My degree will allow me more opportunities in my field. As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? A secretary in a doctor’s office. I actually took my dream a step further and am now in leadership with physician practices. Why did you choose to take online classes through eMajor? To have the flexibility to do my schoolwork when it’s convenient for me. It also allows me to take more credit hours at a time and still work a full time job and have a family. What eMajor class has been ...

60 Seconds with Dr. Nat Hardy - eCore Professor and Life-long Tiger

Dr. Nat Hardy is an Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies at Savannah State University. He was recently elected President of the Georgia Council of Graduate Schools , which works to build awareness of the benefits and value of a graduate degree to the students and citizens of Georgia. eCore is proud to have had Dr. Hardy as an eCore instructor since 2012. Take a minute to learn a little more about Dr. Nat Hardy. Where did you complete your degree(s)? B.A. (English) University of Alberta, M.A. (English) McMaster University, M.F.A. (Creative Writing) Louisiana State University, M.Ed. (Higher Education Administration) Georgia Southern University, Ph.D. (English) University of Alberta. What drew you to your field of expertise? I was always an avid reader of literature and I truly enjoyed writing. During my undergraduate degree at the University of Alberta, I switched my major from Philosophy to English because I was a much better English major than a Philosoph...

60 Seconds with eCore Student, Nalucha Shakalima

Nalucha Shakalima Age: 22 Albany State University Why is completing your college degree important to you? Completing my degree will open up opportunities for me and help me to achieve my dreams in life. Why did you choose to take online classes through eCore? I chose to take an eCore online class because it allowed me to have more flexibility with my already demanding nursing school schedule. How would you describe the instructors you’ve had in your eCore classes? My instructor has been very organized, structured, helpful and professional. Besides being a college student, what do you spend your time doing? Working out, reading, volunteering, relaxing and meeting new people. How and when do you make time to spend on your school work? I set aside certain hours of my day to complete assignments for both my online and non-online classes. It ranges during the day to the night time. What has been the best thing about your eCore experience? The flexibility, my ins...

60 Seconds with eCore Student and Grandmother of 8, Cathryn Vandiver

Cathryn with three of her eight grandchildren.  Cathryn Vandiver Age: 56 Institution: Dalton State College Why is completing your college degree important to you? Completing my college degree will be a dream come true! I started this journey over 37 years ago and did not finish. Since then, I have raised a family as a single parent for 14 years with three young children. I worked two jobs for many years, and I was a legal secretary for attorneys for over twenty years. I currently keep three of my grandchildren while my two daughters teach school. I want my college degree because I need it to pursue my ultimate goal, and to be an inspiration to others that it is never too late to learn and contribute to society! Thank you for the opportunity eCore gives students like me who could not otherwise attend classes in person to get their college degree. Why did you choose to take online classes through eCore? It was offered by the college I wanted to attend, Dalton S...

Get the Job you Want! Four Steps to Using LinkedIn in your Job Search

If you are currently, or soon-to-be in the market for a new job, then you have probably heard the saying – it’s all about networking. Employers today receive stacks and stacks of resumes for open positions, making it harder and harder to stand out as an applicant.  Sure, you may have impressive work experience and a killer cover letter, but odds are that there is at least one applicant in that stack who already has name recognition within the company – and that person is much more likely to get an interview. When searching for a job – it’s all about who you know. If you don’t know the right people, and the right people don’t know you – then you need to change that. The way to do that is through networking. Ten years ago, networking had a completely different meaning than it does today. Sure, joining and being active in professional groups is great, but today we have a much more powerful professional networking tool right at our fingertips  –  LinkedIn. To a beginner,...

Free the Textbook!

If you are or ever have been a college student, you know that textbooks are expensive. Affordable Learning Georgia estimates that at the current rate, students in the University System of Georgia would spend a total of $1,400,000,000 on textbooks. With student loan debt already a major issue in our country, it goes without saying that this type of expenditure needs attention. So – what is the higher education industry, particularly in Georgia, doing to address this issue?   The answer is Open Educational Resources, or OERs, which are freely accessible, openly licensed documents and media that are useful for teaching and learning. Many colleges and universities are making efforts to transition to the use of OERs in their classes as opposed to traditional textbooks, which provides a zero-cost textbook option to students. Our state is paving the way for this movement, with programs like Affordable Learning Georgia, which has set a goal of providing faculty in the USG with ...