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RESOURCES & DOCUMENTS

The Right Tool for Every Need!


Successfully landing a job, fellowship, clerkship, or any other position requires planning. A great cover letter, resume, writing sample, and more are essential to your search. So is good advice from the CDO, faculty and others. Below is a list of resources to help you prepare your application materials, keep up on job openings, and more. Most of these resources are on 12Twenty (kind of your toolbox for all things career).

A Bit of Advice on Resumes & Cover Letters


The Rule of One
“The Rule of One” - It applies equally to resumes and cover letters, and is the universal baseline for any good professional resume. It is also nice that it is easy to remember. By following the Rule of One your documents will look clean, consistent, and be easy to read. It ensures that there is enough white space on the page to make it look clean and elegant. You may be tempted to add some flair, but don’t confuse more stuff with better design. Trust us, keep it simple, and let your words shine through. The Rule of One says that your resume and cover letter are limited to:

One Page:

Seriously, one page, and that is more then enough. If you insist on sending an employer more than one page it will give a bad impression and often get your application tossed. The only exceptions are when an employer specifically asks for something longer, like a Curriculum Vite, or when you apply for a Federal Job for after graduation. If you think you fall under one of those exceptions, lets talk, because they have their own rules too.

One Inch Margins:

A one inch margin looks good. Really, really good. It creates a frame around the words in your resume or cover letter. It is also makes everything look particularly well balanced on a standard 8.5in x 11in sheet of paper. Narrower margins make the page look busy and unfriendly. Wider margins look wasteful. This of it like the Goldilocks of the page layout world. . . “just right!”

One font:

I know, there are all those fonts that come free with Word, and you really want to get your money’s worth! But STOP! More is certainly less in this case. Jumping between fonts and doing it well is incredibly difficult. The very best designers, working on projects that have no limits on creativity still struggle to mix fonts on a page, and when they do, they impose really intense rules on how and when it is and is allowed. Instead, pick your font, love that font, and use it everywhere! There are tons of choices, from old-school Times New Roman, to Myriad Pro (the font you are reading now), and many more.

One font size (except for your name at the top):

By sticking to one font size we keep your documents looking clean and consistent. That size should almost always be either 11 pt. or 12 pt., depending on the font you choose. Instead of making something larger when you want to emphasize it, it is better to make it all caps, or bold, or maybe both. We also rely on formatting like indentations to help the reader know things like what is most important. The only exception in where your name appears at the top of the page. There, bum the font at least two point sizes, and your probably want to bold it too.

One Color (and it is white or off-white):

It is a colorful world, but not on your resume. Simple and elegant wins the day. Pick a resume paper that is good quality, and either white or off-white, and buy a box, as well an matching envelopes, and you are good to go! And if you cannot afford resume paper, just pop into the CDO or email us and we will give you some of our stash (and no one will ever know we gave it to you).
Legal Resume
Legal resumes are very specific in terms of structure and design. They are built to be scanned, highlight your experience, talents, and background. This is the resume you will need 95% or the time. It is brief, direct, and efficient. it elegance and utility come from is simplicity. This will be the most important employment document you create, and you will updating it often, so it needs to be perfect. You can find examples in the Resource Library on 12Twenty.
Other Kinds of Resumes
Some opportunities demand resume styles that differ from the Legal Resume. If you are considering a federal job, there is a good chance you need a long-form resume. It had greater detail that a legal resume, and can be two pages or longer. If you want to go into business in a non-legal capacity, a classic business resume may serve you better. Academic positions often demand their own kind of resume, called a curriculum vitae, can be several pages long. If any of these situations applies to you, we should meet to discuss what you need, how to create it, and any resources that we have to help you build the best non-legal resume possible.
Cover Letters
Cover letters are to resumes like butter in to bread. They go together. Cover letters are a way to compliment your resume, and give an insight into yourself that an employer does not get from the list of facts in your resume. It is also worth the time to draft one or two cover letters that are genuinely exceptional, and reuse them, than try to write a new cover letter every time you submit a new application. This is because the more letters you draft the greater the chance you may a mistake, and mistakes get your application tossed. There is way to much about cover letters to go over here, so check out the Resource Library here, and download the 1L CDO Handbook. In brief, here are the basics of a solid three paragraph cover letter:

First Paragraph:

The introductory paragraph is three sentences long, and to the point. It explains why you are writing the letter, what you are asking for, and who you are.

Second Paragraph:

The second paragraph is four to five sentences, and is where we get to say something meaningful, or when we call the “kick the do, pet the dog” paragraph (we explain this metaphor in in the 1L CDO Handbook so go chek it out, and there is no real kicking involved . . . or dogs for that matter). While you could repeat your resume in the form of prose, a much better choice is to tell a story. Maybe it is why you came to law school, why you want to pursue a particular practice, or a particularly interesting project you worked on last summer. Why tell a story instead of saying stuff like “I’m a great writer/team player/self starter and so on? Because there is no actual evidence you are any of those things, and to the extent your resume reflects that, we don’t need to say it again. Instead, give them an insight into who you are through a narrative. Even though the text will only be able to say one thing, the subtext will say all the other things for us.

Third Paragraph:

The final paragraph is three to fours sentences, thanks the reader, lets them know what you want again, and sets up the next step in your correspondence.

General CDO Resources & Materials


Most of the CDO’s resources can be found on 12Twenty. If you don’t have an account on the system, click here to set one up now. Now only is it critical to access CDO resources, but it how you apply for jobs, participate in on-campus interviews, and get alerts about programs, post-graduate fellowships, and more. Here is a short list of what you will find on the system!

REACH OUT TO THE CDO TEAM


You can also reach out to anyone on the CDO team by phone or email, or book a meeting through the Calendly Meeting Scheduler links below.

Arturo Thompson
Arturo Thompson
Assistant Dean, Career Development Office
Jaclyn Howell
Director, Career Development Office
Jim Holbrook
Jim Holbrook
Director of Special Projects
Amanda Barr
Amanda Barr
Career Counselor
Cynthia Lane
Cynthia Lane
Administrative Assistant