Using Projects for Resumes & College Strategy
This post explains how to use projects effectively without overclaiming or misrepresenting your work. Using Projects on Your Resume Projects can be listed on your resume when you have actually completed the work. When describing a project: - Focus on what you did, not the project title - Emphasize skills used and outputs created - Keep descriptions clear, factual, and defensible Good resume bullets show: - Initiative - Independent problem-solving - Applied skills - Clear outcomes Avoid: - Copying language blindly - Claiming roles you didn’t perform - Inflating scope beyond what you completed Honesty makes the experience credible. Using Projects for College Decisions Projects are especially useful for: - Testing interest before committing to a major - Validating whether a field fits your strengths - Identifying what kind of work you actually enjoy - Supporting transfer or program change decisions After completing a project, ask yourself: - Did I enjoy this type of work? - What parts felt engaging or draining? - Would I want to do more of this long-term? - What skills did I naturally lean on? Your answers matter more than the finished product. Using Projects in Applications or Statements Projects can be referenced in: - Transfer applications - Personal statements - Grad school statements - Scholarship essays When doing so: - Describe the problem you worked on - Explain how you approached it - Reflect on what you learned about yourself You’re not proving expertise, you’re showing intentional exploration and growth. A Note on Ethics and Representation Gradogy projects are simulated experiences. You should: - Represent them as projects or independent work - Be prepared to explain your process - Avoid presenting them as formal employment Using projects ethically protects your credibility and future opportunities.