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The Collegian’s Bookshelf

 

College Student GuideThe College Student's Guide to Landing a Great Job

Bob Roth

AuthorHouse, October 2007

Students understand that their cumulative average is built semester by semester. And yet, most students and parents don’t recognize that the same thing is true of the job search plan. The accomplishments, successes, achievements and positive results that you will include on your resume will be accumulated as you move through your four-year college experience. Students who wait until their senior year to think about their resume and job search strategy are unlikely to land a great job.  Smart students plan for success. They actively strive to put themselves in the best possible position to land a great job. Those who don’t will fall by the wayside.  This book can help you achieve significantly and increase your chances for landing a great job with a well known and respected employer.  The College Student’s Guide to Landing a Great Job gives guidance on how to create a detailed, step-by-step plan of action; build a list of significant accomplishments; demonstrate the most desirable, work related skills; and prepare for and conduct a comprehensive job search.

 

Life 101Life 101: Real-World Advice for Graduating College Seniors (Paperback)

Peter C Wallace

iUniverse Star, November 6, 2007

All too many students graduate from college without the practical tools and know-how they need to succeed as adults. To ease new grads’ transition from learning to doing, from college life to professional life, this essential guide delivers all the motivation and real-world advice required.  With his signature enthusiasm, wit, and level-headedness, Wallace shares proven keys to professional and personal success. Under Wallace’s trusted guidance, you’ll be equipped to handle the inevitable uncertainties of life with confidence and grace. Readers will also learn to make solid, well-thought-out decisions and choices that will bring many achievements and great happiness.

 

Grad to GreatGrad to Great

Anne Brown, Beth Zefo

Dalidaze Press, November 2, 2007

Written by sisters and first-time authors Anne Brown, and Beth Zefo, Grad to Great is a post college handbook written specifically for today’s graduates who demand more personalized attention in the workplace, and who may have a more difficult time adjusting to an environment in which their parents have no influence. It is no secret that Generation Y – also referred to as the Millennials – is considered the most coddled of the four generations working side-by-side in the workplace today. The authors take a “tell-it-like-it-is” approach to this and other issues that make surviving and thriving in the real world a challenge for most recent graduates. Readers benefit from real on-the-job scenarios, interviews with executives, and insightful tactics that can be put into practice immediately.

 

Career HighwayDriving the Career Highway: 20 Road Signs You Can't Afford to Miss (Hardcover)

Janice Reals Ellig, William J. Morin

Nelson Business, May 1, 2007

As leaders of prestigious executive search firms and organizational consulting firms, Janice Reals Ellig and William J. Morin have decades of experience working with people who failed to see the signs of trouble in their careers-or to read them right. These two experts have distilled the 20 most compelling problems and situations that can cause a person to detour, stall, get lost, or crash and burn on their career highway.

 

ClickCLICK: Ten Truths for Building Extraordinary Relationships

George C. Fraser

McGraw-Hill; January 2008

In CLICK: Ten Truths for Building Extraordinary Relationships, George C. Fraser, one of the foremost authorities on relationship building, details 10 simple and proven principles that will allow people to tap into the richest resource on the planet – other people – no matter how hard it’s been in the past to do so.  Readers will be able to apply these skills to all areas of their lives – to create an extraordinary marriage, lifelong friendships, or powerful and enriching business relationships. So what is “click”?  Fraser insists that networking is just the beginning, connecting takes relationships to the next level, and clicking is when at least two people add a special value to each other and create synergy.  It is the ultimate goal of the networking process – to create a win-win. 

 

Black PainBlack Pain: It Just Looks Like We're Not Hurting

Terrie M. Williams

Simon & Schuster, January 8, 2008

Black Pain identifies emotional pain – which uniquely and profoundly affects the Black experience – as the root of lashing out through desperate acts of crime, violence, drug and alcohol abuse, eating disorders, workaholism, and addiction to shopping, gambling, and sex. Few realize these destructive acts are symptoms of our inner sorrow. In Black Pain, Williams has inspired the famous and the ordinary to speak out and mental health professionals to offer solutions. The book is a mirror turned on you. Do you see yourself and your loved ones here? Do the descriptions of how the pain looks, feels, and sounds seem far too familiar? Now you can do something about it. Stop suffering. Black Pain offers a clear explanation of our troubles and a guide to finding relief through faith, therapy, diet, and exercise, as well as through building a supportive network (and eliminating toxic people). 

 


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