JAMES P
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Just a heads-up before I start here that I have checked out some of the old resume/cover letter threads. They were a big help, thanks! I've also checked out the AMTA articles on the subject, and have re-read the pertinent chapter in What Color is Your Parachute for good measure. Just so folks know where I'm coming from.
Anyhow!
I'm a new grad, in review classes until I take my licensing exams in June. I should be licensed in neighboring KY in late June (they accept the MBLEx), and my home state of Ohio in mid-August (the State Medical Board takes 6-8 weeks to announce new licencees).
So I'm taking the time now to really get my personal documents in order.
Since I'm changing fields from early childhood education to massage therapy, it's a little bit awkward. I'm pretty confident in my ability to articulate my transferable skills like regular assessment and documentation, maintaining a safe and healthy environment, communication skills, keeping abreast of licensing requirements, and oldies-but-goodies like attendance and punctuality. It's the massage stuff that I'm a bit more concerned about.
1. Obviously, I have relatively little massage experience. I'm including the number of documented practice massages I completed, my preceptor massages (massages provided to and assessed by local LMTs), my student outreach placement working with HIV+ individuals, and the events where I've provided chair massage. It looks so pathetic to me! I'm not trying to hide that I'm a new graduate, so is it worth it to include all this, or does it look like I'm trying too hard to appear to have experience in the field?
2. What kind of coursework should I include?
A. During school, we received training that graduates of other local schools do not, including about 20 hours each with muscle energy techniques (emphasis on pelvic dysfunctions), intra-oral massage for TMJD, and CranioSacral. Now I LOVE the MET work, and want to learn a lot more, so that's definitely going on the resume. The CranioSacral interests me, but while I'm competent for my beginning level of training, I can't honestly say I'm as confident in my ability to really help people with it to the same degree. The intra-oral work is very cool, and I can see that it has the potential to do a lot of good, but I definitely feel like I need more training before I would feel right about advertising it to people. So that's staying off for now. But what about the CranioSacral? I could definitely see myself getting better at it with more practice ... but I feel bad just "practicing" on people who are paying clients! Thoughts?
B. How much detail should I include about the regular instruction I had? We spent about 3 quarters on Swedish technique, 2 on the stuff just mentioned, and 2 on assessment and muscle-specific treatment for issues like whiplash, carpal tunnel, rotator cuff injuries, etc. Plus 7 quarters in anatomy and physiology, and extra workshops on ethics, business, law, hydrotherapy, chair massage, and the like. I feel like this is probably standard stuff. Should I just assume that it is, or does that "@SS out of U and ME" saying apply here?
3. Do grades matter? My mentor says I need to brag more in my education section. I was the top student in Anatomy and Physiology every term, earning a 96% or above each time. But that says more about my being a brainiac who can memorize easily and who was lucky enough to be required to study Latin in elementary school than it does about being a good massage therapist. I don't want to rub my nerdiness in anybody's face, but I've also been told that if you don't include your grades, employers will think it's because they weren't any good. Does that hold true in the massage therapy world?
4. Anything else you wish you'd known before putting your first massage resume together? Aside from spelling, correct info, and all that jazz.
Thanks a million!
Kat
Anyhow!
I'm a new grad, in review classes until I take my licensing exams in June. I should be licensed in neighboring KY in late June (they accept the MBLEx), and my home state of Ohio in mid-August (the State Medical Board takes 6-8 weeks to announce new licencees).
So I'm taking the time now to really get my personal documents in order.
Since I'm changing fields from early childhood education to massage therapy, it's a little bit awkward. I'm pretty confident in my ability to articulate my transferable skills like regular assessment and documentation, maintaining a safe and healthy environment, communication skills, keeping abreast of licensing requirements, and oldies-but-goodies like attendance and punctuality. It's the massage stuff that I'm a bit more concerned about.
1. Obviously, I have relatively little massage experience. I'm including the number of documented practice massages I completed, my preceptor massages (massages provided to and assessed by local LMTs), my student outreach placement working with HIV+ individuals, and the events where I've provided chair massage. It looks so pathetic to me! I'm not trying to hide that I'm a new graduate, so is it worth it to include all this, or does it look like I'm trying too hard to appear to have experience in the field?
2. What kind of coursework should I include?
A. During school, we received training that graduates of other local schools do not, including about 20 hours each with muscle energy techniques (emphasis on pelvic dysfunctions), intra-oral massage for TMJD, and CranioSacral. Now I LOVE the MET work, and want to learn a lot more, so that's definitely going on the resume. The CranioSacral interests me, but while I'm competent for my beginning level of training, I can't honestly say I'm as confident in my ability to really help people with it to the same degree. The intra-oral work is very cool, and I can see that it has the potential to do a lot of good, but I definitely feel like I need more training before I would feel right about advertising it to people. So that's staying off for now. But what about the CranioSacral? I could definitely see myself getting better at it with more practice ... but I feel bad just "practicing" on people who are paying clients! Thoughts?
B. How much detail should I include about the regular instruction I had? We spent about 3 quarters on Swedish technique, 2 on the stuff just mentioned, and 2 on assessment and muscle-specific treatment for issues like whiplash, carpal tunnel, rotator cuff injuries, etc. Plus 7 quarters in anatomy and physiology, and extra workshops on ethics, business, law, hydrotherapy, chair massage, and the like. I feel like this is probably standard stuff. Should I just assume that it is, or does that "@SS out of U and ME" saying apply here?
3. Do grades matter? My mentor says I need to brag more in my education section. I was the top student in Anatomy and Physiology every term, earning a 96% or above each time. But that says more about my being a brainiac who can memorize easily and who was lucky enough to be required to study Latin in elementary school than it does about being a good massage therapist. I don't want to rub my nerdiness in anybody's face, but I've also been told that if you don't include your grades, employers will think it's because they weren't any good. Does that hold true in the massage therapy world?
4. Anything else you wish you'd known before putting your first massage resume together? Aside from spelling, correct info, and all that jazz.
Thanks a million!
Kat