try and look for a professional resume writer he will do the job for you
or you can pay me $100, and I will write it for you. I do write them for people on the side....
Couple free tips:
1) Resume paper is generally a waste of money. If you have extra money to waste, buy some and keep it until you go to an interview. but in general no one cares.
2) If you are a volunteer EMT in BedStuy, make sure you list that on your resume as you would any other employer.
3) Say what you did. This is how one of my former coworkers described his responsibilities as an EMT and Special Operations Technician:
" Delivery of focused patient care in a dense, highly volatile urban environment, as part of one the busiest, most comprehensive EMS systems worldwide
Providing a wide range of emergency services to a culturally and socially diverse range of sick and injured patients including pre-hospital medical care, technical rescue and HAZMAT response, emergency communications, state-wide MCI/Large Scale Incident response"
4) there are 100 applicants for that one position, why should a hiring manager interview you? what sets you apart from everyone else?
5) basic fonts are not only encouraged, they are required. Don't include images. If you go too fancy, the Resume scanning software will fill your resume in the circular storage bin. Also, when you submit a resume via an electronic system, it should be a word doc. if you ever email it to an individual, send it as a PDF.
6) Hobbies are nice, but not needed on the resume, because no one cares. Skills that are relevant to the job should go on your resume. You may be asked about your hobbies in an interview.
7) find someone's EMS resume that you like, and ask them to email it to you in a word. than change the wording to fit your experience. don't reinvent the wheel