1. Move your Work Experience ahead of your education, it holds more value on the paper than simply where you're at today.
2. I'll apologize for being so blunt, but the bullet points for your work experience suck. They're dry and could use additional context. Your work experience needs to tell a story of what you were doing so you come off as intriguing. What sounds better, "Designed graphics, maintained WordPress for company website" or "Developed & implemented new version of company website using Twitter Bootstrap."
3. Your more recent job title: get rid of the "what the job really was" in parenthesis. Call it what it was, and elaborate that you took the lead role when you reach the point of having a conversation.
4. Clark Strategic Partners Job - Strip the job title down to "Web Developer". You're not freelance if you're specifically defining them as an employer under your work experience, and naming whom it was for is redundant. If it was truly a freelance job, then rework that section with the focus of you working for yourself as a freelance dev and talk about what you did for CSP in the bullet points.
5. The last job on your resume, the advisor one: Move that to the top if it's still you're still presently in the role. Work Experience always goes what you're currently doing first, followed by what you've done recently.
6. Simplify your technical skills section. For you, this section should be nothing more than a comma separated list of technology keywords. Don't separate by experience levels - only put the ones on there you're confident enough behind to take a job/internship doing.
7. Your resume is too long, either trim content or tweak page margins/fonts/etc to get the resume to fit perfectly on a single page. You don't have enough overflow to justify having a second page.
2. I'll apologize for being so blunt, but the bullet points for your work experience suck. They're dry and could use additional context. Your work experience needs to tell a story of what you were doing so you come off as intriguing. What sounds better, "Designed graphics, maintained WordPress for company website" or "Developed & implemented new version of company website using Twitter Bootstrap."
3. Your more recent job title: get rid of the "what the job really was" in parenthesis. Call it what it was, and elaborate that you took the lead role when you reach the point of having a conversation.
4. Clark Strategic Partners Job - Strip the job title down to "Web Developer". You're not freelance if you're specifically defining them as an employer under your work experience, and naming whom it was for is redundant. If it was truly a freelance job, then rework that section with the focus of you working for yourself as a freelance dev and talk about what you did for CSP in the bullet points.
5. The last job on your resume, the advisor one: Move that to the top if it's still you're still presently in the role. Work Experience always goes what you're currently doing first, followed by what you've done recently.
6. Simplify your technical skills section. For you, this section should be nothing more than a comma separated list of technology keywords. Don't separate by experience levels - only put the ones on there you're confident enough behind to take a job/internship doing.
7. Your resume is too long, either trim content or tweak page margins/fonts/etc to get the resume to fit perfectly on a single page. You don't have enough overflow to justify having a second page.