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"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”
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Ask a manager 4

Ask a manager 4

Q Stirring It Up (the book club) AAM 4 Remember to respond to my post A reader writes: I saw this post from Randy Cohen (formerly the author of The New York Times’ Ethicist column) on Facebook this morning: “A tougher one I received at the column: may a job hunter omit a Ph.D. [on his resume] lest a potential employer find him overqualified? No. Some things are not an employer’s business – your religion or erotic proclivities or Facebook password. But a CV is meant to be a full account of your education and work history.” I commented, making the argument you make about a resume being a marketing document designed to present the potential employee in the best light. To which he responded: “You may be selective, of course, or some resumes would be 50 pages long, but you may not be deceptive, deliberately concealing work or education history that a potential employer has a legitimate right to know.” I commented again with some (made-up) practical examples: What if I have an MFA and am applying for a job in finance? What if I temped while I was unemployed? No response (as of now) from Mr. Cohen. … so what do you think of this? Do you and he just disagree, or is it that you’re coming at the question from different angles (you as a manager, he as an ethicist)? Or maybe, in some cases, circumstances trump ethics (and in others, ethics trump circumstances)? Anyway, I was just interested in your thoughts on this.

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I think that I disagree with Randy Cohen in this matter. This is because of the aspect that every candidate must highlight the reasons for which the candidate must be selected for the position in which the candidate is being interviewed. The candidate is not required to provide all the details about all types of work in a resume. This is because irrelevant work done by the candidate might not be required to be presented in the resume. Irrelevant work details provided in a resume might show that the candidate has been honest. However, it would make many employers ignore such details or get irritated for providing such details.