I'm entering my senior year in college and, obviously, I'll be looking to start me career soon. My major is in Information Systems. My current resume is pretty full and I've had to narrow the margins and make the text a bit smaller to make it all fit on one page. Once I graduate from college though will I need my High school name or GPA or anything on there? Do employers care about that at all?
If they do look at it do they care that I took AP and IB classes or should I just keep it short and just put where I went and my GPA. Right now my High school section is only about 4 lines but I'm wondering if its necessary at all as I approach graduating.
Thank you.
human resources - I'm about to graduate. Should I include a previously halfway completed academic program on my resume? - The Workplace Stack Exchange
Should I take my high school info off my resume once I graduate college.
Should I list college I attended but did not graduate from?
Do I need to include my high school education?
No. Leave it off.
In the long term, all future employers will care about is the degree that you were awarded, and for that all they need to know is the name of the degree, the institution where you earned it, and the year you graduated.
In the short term, it will raise questions about why you did not complete it. Even if there are valid reasons, it can't strengthen your resume - you didn't complete the degree, and years spent at college aren't convertible to years of professional experience. Sorry.
If there are skills relevant to the job you're applying for which you learned during that time then it would be a good idea to include them, but in a separate "skills" section, unrelated to your education.
For what it's worth, I spent way longer than normal earning my degree as well, and while it was a little more difficult to get my first job, it has not impacted my career after that at all. Don't stress about it.
There is really no one good answer to that.
Did you learn something valuable during the 2 years at the first college? If you did then do include it and be prepared to explain it and to answer the question why you quit the program.
If you didn't, leave it off.
As someone correctly points out in a comment, a factor you might also want to consider is whether you will have a gap in your CV if you don't include the college. If you worked at the time and can include the job you won't have a gap, so you should only include the college if it brought you something really valuable.