Curriculum Vitae
We recommend updating the Curriculum Vitae (CV) before the application process begins. It is NOT directly uploaded as part of an application.
An up-to-date CV will be helpful:
- Completing the residency application including the “experiences” section
- Preparing a personal statement
- Identify unique characteristics
- Preparing for interviews.
- Letter writers will request an up-to-date CV to aid them in the preparation of LoRs.
Below you will find recommended template sections to use as you update your CV. This template aligns closely with many sections in the ERAS Residency Applicant Worksheet . This should facilitate cut and pasting of this information into the application system portal.
Sample Curriculum Vitae
Quick Tips
QUICK TIPS
- Your CV can be as long as needed—especially if you have a prior career, publications, or extensive volunteer work.
- Emphasize medical school experiences, while including permanent sections such as education, publications/presentations, and explanations for any time gaps.
- Include significant experiences that support your overall narrative.
- Never copy another person’s CV. Ensure all information is accurate and verifiable—do not risk compromising your academic integrity.
Formatting
Formatting
- Reads Left to Right
- Most recent first (except Publications in chronological order)
- Standard type (Times New Roman, Calibri, Arial)
- 10–12-point font and1-inch margins
- Bold or italics should be used sparingly (e.g., headings or to highlight your name in a citation)
- Page Number (lower left corner)
- Use University of Maryland School of Medicine, not University of Maryland Medical School
- Do NOT include SSN, age, gender, race, religion, political affiliation, marital/parental status, disability or national origin, DEA number or license numbers
Section Headings
Sections
Personal information (First Page)
- Name (as it will appear on your application)
- Address with Contact information (phone and email)
Main Section Headings
Consider including 2-3 detail bullets (optional).
Leadership is not an ERAS Section Experience. A standard CV could have this as a stand-alone section but for ERAS you will have to choose an available section and we encourage you to highlight that leadership position.
- Education
- For medical school, indicate that your degree is "expected (date of graduation)”
- If dual degree can place thesis as bullet under advanced degree
- Teaching certificate (could also be under employment)
- Honors and Awards (Honors/professional societies, Research awards or scholarships)
- Employment/Work Experience
- Military Service (if appropriate)
- Education/Training
- Micro-certificate, Pre-clerkship elective, Away rotation
- Licensure (optional) (NOT BLS/ACLS but nursing/PA/EMT)
- Volunteer/Service/Advocacy Experience
- Professional Organization
- Other extracurricular activity, club, hobby (optional, this would not be a standard section on a CV)
- Teaching/Mentoring
- Research Experience
- Include the institution and principal investigator
- Grant Funding and/or if you were listed as principal or co-investigator
- Publications
- Hobbies or Interests (optional)
- Generally, are bullet points.
- Language fluency (fluent/conversational). Be able to demonstrate this skill if asked during an interview. This is also a separate section in ERAS.
- Cultural knowledge (special training or unique experience)
Publications Section/Tips
Publication Tips
- Keep citation style consistent
- Bold your name
- Chronological order
- Peer reviewed means that a board of academic reviewers in the subject area of the journal, review materials for quality of research and adherence to editorial standards of the journal, before articles are accepted for publication.
- If a manuscript is in preparation, you could include this within the research experience bullet. To include in the publication section could be viewed as an empty promise. See below for categories such as submitted, under review, in progress, accepted, etc.
Subsections for Publications based on ERAS worksheet:
- Peer Reviewed Journal Article/Abstracts
- Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles/Abstracts (other than published)
- (Submitted, provisionally accepted, accepted or in-press)
- Peer Reviewed Book Chapters
- Scientific Monograph (monograph is a specialist book on a single subject written by one author
- Other Articles (newspaper or newsletter articles, policy briefs, etc.)
- Poster Presentations
- Oral Presentations
- Peer Reviewed Online Publications
- Non-Peer reviewed Publications
Extra thoughts on Publications Section:
- Publications cited in databases (e.g. Pubmed) will provide you with the official citation.
- Generally, if a national conference calls for "original and unpublished" work, then it is poor form to present exactly the same paper/poster at another national meeting. If there is new data presented and a different poster (same project) this is generally acceptable and may be represented twice on the CV.
- Additionally, a student may present a poster at Medical Student Research Day (internal) and then submit the poster to a national conference.
- Presentations refer to presentations that have been FORMALLY accepted or invited at regional or national academic meetings. Presentations that you do in the context of your education, for instance on rounds or in clerkship conferences, etc. are NOT academic presentations and should not be listed on your CV.
- Presented at Virtual conference: https://style.mla.org/paper-presented-at-virtual-conference/
- Presentation at a Cancelled Conference: https://style.mla.org/presentation-canceled-conference/
- You can also submit questions to the HS/HSL library [link https://answers.hshsl.umaryland.edu/]
Common Missteps
COMMON MISSTEPS:
- A glitzy appearance
- Using a passive voice or first person; instead use an active voice
- “The research investigates the relationship between X and Y” (active) versus “The research was investigating the relationship between X and Y” (passive)
- Not spell checking and proof-reading
- Not accounting for gaps in time: People look for holes in your life, and there should be no extended period of time unaccounted for. It is better to say that you worked for a year (and what’s wrong with that?) than to have them wonder where you might have been during that time.
- Not including Pre-college achievements (e.g., high school valedictorian, Eagle Scout) which may be relevant
- Not including leadership, volunteering and sports activities from undergraduate years
- Listing hobbies that would show a Program Director that you may be distracted (e.g., playing video games, fantasy football, etc.) or ensure that these hobbies are placed in context
If you are not sure where an activity, publication or article should be listed, talk to your research mentor, specialty advisor, and/or your career advisory dean.