MatchResume.ai Editorial Team · Updated July 18, 2026
How to write a college student resume
Put the evidence that relates to your target role first: relevant courses, projects, internships, research, and campus activities.
What counts as experience
For college students, evidence can come from classes, projects, student organizations, volunteering, part-time work, competitions, and certifications. Use accurate facts and responsibilities; do not claim professional experience you do not have.
Build the resume in this order
- Add contact details and a target role.
- Place education near the top, including relevant coursework and activities.
- Describe projects or responsibilities with clear verbs and evidence.
- List only skills you can explain in an interview.
- Tailor the finished resume to a vacancy when you have one.
Evidence map
- Education
- Coursework, GPA when strong, awards, and activities.
- Projects
- Your role, tools, deliverable, and verifiable outcome.
- Activities
- Responsibilities in clubs, teams, events, or volunteering.
- Skills
- Tools or methods supported by the entries above.
Examples of accurate bullets
- Created a Python data-cleaning script for a statistics course and documented its use for classmates.
- Supported weekly social posts for a student organization and tracked event registrations.
- Presented a semester-long UX research project to a faculty review panel.
Next step
You can finish a core resume without a vacancy. When you find one, match it against your resume and use any genuine gaps as a learning plan rather than adding unsupported skills.
Create my student resumeCareer outlook research: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook and O*NET OnLine.