For international students targeting full-time US tech roles, every part-time position, freelance project, or gig must be formatted as a real job entry—complete with a professional title, company, dates, and 2–4 bullet points that focus on accomplishments, not duties. Recruiters evaluate your potential based on impact, not hours, so treat each experience as evidence of the skills the role demands.
Why Your Part-Time and Gig Work Deserves a Real Spot on Your Resume
International students often accumulate a patchwork of work experiences: on-campus IT jobs, CPT internships, freelance web design projects, open-source contributions, and part-time roles from their home country. This diversity can be a hidden strength when presented properly. It shows initiative, flexibility, and a willingness to solve real-world problems—qualities US tech employers prize. The challenge is formatting this experience in a way that both ATS software and human recruiters recognize as professional employment rather than casual side work.
The Golden Rule: Format Every Role Like a Full-Time Job
The single most important rule is to present every part-time, freelance, or gig engagement as you would a full-time position. Here's the template:
- Job title: Use the clearest standard title (e.g., "Web Developer" or "Software Engineering Intern"). Avoid adding "Part-Time" or "Freelance" to the title itself—the context will be clear from the dates and company name.
- Company name: For gig clients, use "Self-Employed" or the platform name (e.g., "Upwork"). If you had several clients, consider grouping them under a single "Freelance" header.
- Dates: Always include month and year (e.g., "Jan 2023 – Present" or "Jun 2022 – Aug 2022").
- Bullet points: Write 2–4 bullet points that describe accomplishments, not duties. Use action verbs (built, designed, optimized, led) and quantify when possible.
ATS systems scan for this standard format. They expect headings like "Professional Experience" or "Work History". Do not use columns, tables, or fancy formatting—they break parsing. Stick to a simple left-aligned layout with consistent font.
Before and After: A Concrete Bullet Rewrite
Here is a typical weak entry for gig work, followed by a strong revision.
Before (vague, duty-focused):
Freelancer
- Develop websites for clients
- Use HTML, CSS, JavaScript
- Worked part-time for one year
After (specific, accomplishment-driven):
Freelance Web Developer | Self-Employed (Remote) | June 2022 – Present
- Designed and deployed 5 responsive client websites using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, contributing to an average 30% increase in organic traffic.
- Managed end-to-end client projects across three time zones, gathering requirements, setting milestones, and delivering weekly progress updates.
- Built a reusable component library that reduced development time for new projects by 20%.
The "After" version treats the role as a real job, uses a clear title and company line, shows duration, and every bullet starts with an action verb and includes a measurable outcome.
Additional Tips for Listing Part-Time and Gig Work
- Reverse chronological order: List your most recent experience first, whether it's a part-time job or a freelance project.
- Omit the "part-time" label: You don't need to call it "part-time" in the title or description. The dates will imply the intensity. If a job is clearly part-time, recruiters infer from the duration.
- Group similar gigs: If you have multiple small freelance projects, create a single entry: "Freelance Developer" with sub-bullets listing selected clients or projects. This keeps your resume focused.
- Quantify: Use numbers to describe impact: "served 200+ users," "reduced page load time by 40%," "wrote 50 unit tests."
- Mind the ATS: Stick to standard fonts (Arial, Calibri), save as .docx or PDF (check the job posting), and avoid images, logos, or unusual characters. Use an .docx file if the company explicitly states it prefers that to PDF.
What Not to Include
- Visa status: Do not write "F1-Visa" or "OPT" on your resume. That information stays for the official application form.
- Hourly rate or wage: Never include pay details.
- Non-technical roles: Unless you can draw transferable skills like teamwork or time management, skip jobs that don't relate to your tech target (e.g., barista, retail).
- Illegal or unverified work: Only document legal, professional experiences. If you did off-the-books work that is not relevant, leave it off.
FAQ
Should I list my on-campus tech support job?
Yes, list it as "IT Support Assistant" or similar and describe contributions such as "handled 30+ service tickets per week" or "assisted with server maintenance." Focus on transferable tech skills.
How can I list work from my home country?
Present it like any other role: translate the job title to a US-recognized equivalent (e.g., "Junior Web Developer"), keep the company name and location, and describe responsibilities in a way US recruiters understand.
Do I need to include every freelance project?
No. Select only the most relevant 2–4 projects that reflect the skills for the job you are targeting. Quality over quantity.
Can I use a functional resume to emphasize skills over chronological order?
For US tech roles, a chronological resume (or combination) is preferred. ATS systems also handle chronological formats better than purely functional ones. Stick to reverse-chronological unless you have a strong reason.
Originally published at prismresume.com.
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