o, let me see if I have this straight.
1. You are nearly finished with year 3 of a 4 year degree.
2. You have zero work/volunteer experience in your chosen field (outside of classes taken for the degree).
3. You have held a job before, but you were working for family.
4. You're not in any clubs/societies in school.
5. You used to run on the track team in high school (3+ years ago) and you/your team was pretty good back then.
You mentioned that you still run. Do you run for your college, or is it now just a hobby?
In general, employers don't care about your hobbies. If they ask "What do you do in your spare time?" during the interview, then mention that you still run for fun/fitness and started back in hs, blah blah blah. Leave it off the resume though.
If you run for your college, then definately include it on the resume though. Then it's an activity that (sort of) demonstrates that you can get on well with others and shows that you have some ability to manage your time (provided your grades are decent).
You didn't give too many details about yourself, but in general, the purpose of the employment screening process is twofold. First, determine if the candidate is capable of actually doing the job. This is often best illustrated by previous work experience. You seem to have little/none. This may hurt you of other applicants have experience. If they just have the same degree you have, then it may not hurt you.
Second, determine if the candidate will get along well with those already working here. This is often demonstrated by membership in clubs and participation in social activities as well as your behaviour/appearance during the interview. Basically, the HR manager is just trying to insure that he's not hiring some weirdo who doesn't shower, eats his boogers, and burns the place down when someone takes his stapler.
So structure you resume in such a way (with recent examples) as to show that you can do the job and you can get along with others. So the phrase "I used to run in high school and still do for fitness" does nothing for you while the phrase (if true) "I like to run in my spare time and I'm an active member in the local running club where I help to organize races, distribute numbers, work aid stations, run the timing system, etc..." shows some degree of organization and people skills.
In any event, best of luck.
Read more: http://www.letsrun.com/forum/flat_read.php?thread=3467586#ixzz2dqvJx9H0
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