<p>I need to have a job on campus at my college and don't know if I should bring a resume for both my interviews. I got 2 appointments, one for being a desk assistant and another for monitoring at a language learning center. I'm pretty sure I can only keep one of the jobs, but I applied to 2 just to make sure I could get a job. Now when I applied there questions online about past work experience and questions about the job in general. Would it be pointless and excessive to bring a resume?</p>
<p>I think you’d be stupid to walk into a job interview without a copy of your resume unless you don’t have anything, and I mean anything at all, to put on it.</p>
<p>I already have one made, but I don’t know if I should bring it. I had to write around 250 words and answer a couple of things on the online forms. One interview is 10 min and the other is 15 min. I just think bringing it would be a waste as they may not even look at it. Maybe the only reason to bring it would be to make me look better?</p>
<p>Can campus jobs be that competitive?</p>
<p>I am looking at off campus jobs just because the ones at my school pay like slave labor and I have the qualifications/experience for a much higher paying position.</p>
<p>Thats weird Emaheevul07. When I applied for my campus job I just dropped by the bosses office (in regular casual school clothes too) and turned in my application. He then asked me a few questions on the spot about whether or not I was willing to do the duties that my job entailed. After that, he told me to fill out my schedule preferences and he’d get me started as soon as he can.</p>
<p>Not at all formal but that was a good thing haha.</p>
<p>Well considering that I filled out an online application for both jobs should I still bring a resume? Would it be pointless to bring one for both quick interview I have.</p>
<p>As long as your resume looks professional, it would not hurt to bring it.</p>
<p>You are most likely interviewing with an adult. They would be impressed you brought a resume.</p>
<p>If you are interviewing with another student (an upperclassmen/grad student), then it is probably not needed.</p>
<p>Bring it just in case.</p>
<p>If it’s not needed, then no big deal.
It it is needed, then you avoid the embarrassment (and the loss of a job opportunity) of being unprepared.</p>
<p>To clarify-- in my opinion, chances are for this kind of a job you are not going to need it, but it is just professional to bring one. I’ve always had much better luck with job offers after I started bringing a resume.</p>
<p>A 15 minute interview usually means you do not need to bring a resume - because they are just checking out if you are a drug user, criminal, have psychopathic tendencies, and/ or whether you still have two thumbs.</p>
<p>But sure, bring one just in case.</p>