How to build your nursing resume!📝
Your nursing résumé is often your first introduction to a future employer - long before you ever shake hands or answer an interview question. When you’re building it, I want you to think of it less as a checklist of jobs and more as the beginning of your professional story. As nursing students, you may feel like you “don’t have enough yet,” but you do. Start with a clean, professional header and a short summary that tells me who you are and what you’re passionate about in nursing. Put your education near the top and include your degree, school, anticipated graduation date, honors, and any academic achievements you’re proud of. When listing clinical rotations, go beyond just naming the unit. Tell us what you actually did. What types of patients did you care for? What skills did you practice? What equipment or documentation systems did you use? A brief, specific description helps employers see your readiness.
Also, don’t underestimate the value of experiences outside of direct patient care. Leadership roles in student organizations, volunteer work, research projects, simulation experiences, or your capstone all matter. If you’ve worked as a CNA, tech, or in another healthcare role, absolutely include it - it shows commitment and real-world experience. Keep your résumé to one page as a student, use clear formatting, and tailor it to the job you’re applying for. Most importantly, let it reflect your professionalism and your heart for patient-centered care. You are not just applying for a position; you are stepping into a profession. Let your résumé show that you understand that responsibility.
