A prospective employer will want to see your resume, of course. If the resume looks promising, he or she will look at your home page to find out a little more about how you present yourself. So your first assignment is to prepare an up to date resume, write a home page, and post the resume there.
I will not specify a format or a style for either the resume or the home page. Anything tasteful will do. The resume should be reasonably compact, and easy to view on line and to print. The home page should show a photo of yourself as well as a link to the resume. It may contain other stuff too. Links to UMB and the UMB CS Department would be appropriate. Links to other sites (particularly professional ones) that you visit often will provide a viewer with feeling of how you approach your work. You may also include more personal information if you wish.
If you need a photo, ask Alex Hwang to take one of you. If you have one you want to scan in you can use the scanner in the graduate computer lab (Healey library 3rd floor) or the one in our NT lab.
If you create a publicly readable public_html
directory
in your unix home directory and put a publicly readable file
index.html
there then the cs department web server will find
it and make it available the next day, at http://www.cs.umb.edu/grad.html.
This is not a competitive exercise (although job searches sometimes are) so you should feel free to look at what your classmates are doing (at $cs681/classlist.html).
Your resume and web site must be completely free of errors in spelling and grammar and contain no broken links. (Such errors can cost you an interview!) I recommend that you get proofreading help - even if you are a native speaker of English.
If you already have a home page (many of you do) take this opportunity to update it (proofread, and test all links).
Back to the cs681 home page.