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As I was typing my curriculum vitae, I was wondering if it was good idea to include my GPA in it. I'm am currently in software engineering and have a 4.0 GPA, but don't like mentioning it too much as I fear people might see this as bragging...

But at the same time, I feel like it is something that could help me land a job (or at least, an interview), so what should I do?

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Bragging? I'd think that would be the whole point of a good resume. Remember that in a resume you're basically trying to sell yourself to potential employers. – Brandon Sep 24 at 22:18
You're making a valid point – Gab Royer Sep 24 at 22:19
That's the whole point of a resume. To put all the best things about yourself. If you don't put it, they'll just assume you had poor grades. – GordonG Sep 24 at 22:36
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I want to impulsively downvote you just because of how ridiculous you sound!!! ;) It's like those people who don't want to market themselves. And then they end up wondering why no one understands how great they are, and how much they have to offer. – GordonG Sep 24 at 22:39
What is GPA? Grade Point Average? – Peter Mortensen Sep 25 at 18:37

12 Answers

vote up 19 vote down check

If you have a good GPA and you're fresh out of college, put it there. After you've had a job or two, take it off (and move the Edu part after the job history).

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Moving education after job history may not always be a good idea. For example, if applying to Oak Ridge National Laboratories then education is important, as frequently they have a degree minimum, and you want to show that quickly. – James Black Sep 27 at 11:30
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Yes, put it on. You've either attended a cruddy university, or you've demonstrated your consistent effort toward your education by maintaining that.

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Typically you mention your GPA if you have a 3.0 or better and you believe your university experience is relevant to the position you are applying for.

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As an interviewer, I don't care about your GPA as it has nothing to do with the job I'm hiring you for.

If I were interviewing you for a position my company has right now (which we do), I would want to know THREE, and only three things:

  1. Can you do the work at the level of quality (and speed) we need it done?
  2. Are you motivated to improve your skillset on your own?
  3. Will your personality be a good fit with the rest of the team?

GPA answers none of those questions--neither does the name of school you attended.

(updated: wrong number of things) :P

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But isn't the point of a resume to land an interview? I probably won't mention my GPA during an interview, but wouldn't you consider it representative of the student capacities? – Gab Royer Sep 24 at 22:21
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GPA and the school you attended means a lot for a fresh graduate. If you're actually looking at less experienced candidates, then you'd be a fool not to at least consider that information. Your answer boils down to "I only care if you're the right candidate". Really? Gee, what a surprise. Factors such as GPA and institution for a recent graduate can be indicators to those things. – phoebus Sep 24 at 22:22
Drink from the firehose of dead trees? Ugh. What about this: guy goes to website, clicks on "apply for job" then gets a page with a relatively simple programming task. Instructions: code in any language, pack up all necessary files to (compile/run) and submit to i.want.a.job@example.com -- those who actually submit something that could reasonably work get a call. Those who can't be bothered go off and submit their dead trees to craigslist, monster, and all the other (ahem) sites where resumes go to die. – BryanH Sep 24 at 22:32
Sorry - missed this one: "Factors such as GPA and institution for a recent graduate ..." Er, GPA and institution (or lack thereof) do not answer my three questions. Have you ever had one of those ESL grad students teaching undergrad calc? The guy (or gal) couldn't teach his way out of a paper bag, but his 4.0 from MIT means... er, um... (sigh) – BryanH Sep 24 at 22:36
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It boils down to this: "what piece of information can I put on a piece of paper that will cause it to be noticed in a stack of many (possibly hundreds) of others?" The accepted answer: "If you have a good GPA and you're fresh out of college, put it there." My answer: "You're doing it wrong." If you (and everyone else here) thinks I'm full of sawdust, that's fine. Good luck. – BryanH Sep 29 at 19:20
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As a former recruiter, I want to see it. If it's missing, I generally assume it's < 3.0. I'd also include any university honors that came with the 4.0.

Once you've been working for a while, say 5 years, it's not really as important. However, I'd probably still stick with listing the 4.0 for longer if you've only had one or two positions during that time.

Resumes are designed to advertise you, so they should be listing positive things about you, and education is important.

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If you have less than two other relevant jobs and/or five years of work experience, I'd probably put the GPA down. If you're a more seasoned candidate, just the institution and degree will suffice.

However, never feel bad about advertising yourself on a resume. That's what it's for. The reason I'd tend not to include the GPA info once I was more experienced is more stylistic than anything else.

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Thanks for the advice! – Gab Royer Sep 24 at 22:25
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If you are new out of school, put it in.

If it is relevant, put it in.

Employers are generally more interested in experience than GPA.

Now, here's one interesting side note. I'm aware of at least two instances where the person with a lower GPA was hired and not the 4.0 applicant, all things being equal.

The reason for it was that there's a perception that a 4.0 person is a perfectionist, when someone with a high, but not dead-on GPA knows how to succeed and is used to failure. Many jobs are not about getting it right the first time, but in knowing how to bounce back from failure with new ideas.

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With a 4.0 (really, anything better than a 3.0) it is worth mentioning. A simple "4.0 GPA, summa cum laude with University and Departmental Honors" or what have you, doesn't take up much space and shows that you cared about the quality of your coursework.

I have been in industry for 15 years, and I still put down the fact that I graduated with a 4.0 on my resume next to each of my degrees. I don't think anyone will judge you negatively for being proud of an accomplishment like that.

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As someone who's interviewed college graduates, it is very informative to me to know your GPA. I always ask how you did in the important classes like Data Structures.

After you've had a job, it's no longer relevant, because I'm more interested in your job and project experience.

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jesus man, stop bragging

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Haha! ! – Gab Royer Sep 26 at 15:13
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if you are a fresher then put it. Otherwise if you have more than 4 years of experience and changed 2 organisations then it is not neccessary to put it in the resume. If at all you want to put it, place it after your job experience and your reponsibilities.

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I would put it there, even if it's just to show that you are proud of your archievements and confident enougth to talk about it. People who are too shy to talk about their accomplishments are, generally speaking, a bit of a problem in a team. E.g. they might find a great solution for a hard problem, but tell nobody about it because of their shyness, thus doing effictively nothing to solve the problem.

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