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Military Parade

Your Resume
Should Hit
Like a Call

Built for Massachusetts first responders.

A tactical guide to writing a resume that gets you through the door — and into the seat.

Build it section by section.

Your name should be the biggest thing on the page. Period. Follow it immediately with your most critical certifications — before they even read your name, they're scanning for "Paramedic."

01. Header & Contact

3–4 lines. No fluff. This is your radio dispatch — clear, concise, and immediately actionable. Lead with your certification, years of experience, and one differentiator.​

02. Professional Summary

This section can be your golden ticket or your immediate disqualifier. For the Westford posting, cert status is the first screen. Make it impossible to miss.​

03. Certifications & Licenses

Reverse chronological. Lead with action verbs. Quantify everything you can — call volume, response times, unit size, team size. This is where "2 years of 911 experience" gets proven.​

04. Work Experience

Minimum requirement is a high school diploma or GED. But if you have a degree or completed paramedic school through an accredited program, show it. Expected completion dates are acceptable here.​

05. Education

Fire and EMS Departments want "team players" and "leaders." Your community involvement is direct evidence. Massachusetts municipalities especially value local roots and civic engagement.​

06. Community & Volunteer Service
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What it looks like: 

A clean, one-page format built for Massachusetts Fire & EMS applications. Copy this structure exactly.

RESUME BUILDER

Your resume updates live in the preview panel as you type. When you're done, hit Print / Save PDF.

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