Campus Career Service offices hope to make getting a job easier through a new resume system.Resume Expert, the system used by the Colleges of Business and Arts and Sciences, is being replaced with a new Internet-based system.The new system, currently unnamed, is already in place at the business college and is scheduled to be in place at the arts and sciences college by January.The College of Education is also moving some of its services on-line, but it will still use Resume Expert, said Tom Vecchione, director of placement services.Resume Expert is a disk students can purchase through their college Career Service office for $25. It can only be used with an IBM computer.Students enter registration information on the disk, such as their major, expected graduation date and specific skills.After entering the resume text, students return the disk to the Career Services office to have it entered onto the database. This information is then passed along to companies offering jobs that match the students’ skills.If a company is interested in a particular student, the student would sign up for an on-campus interview.Margie Bogenschutz, director of Undergraduate Career Services at the College of Business, has been using the Resume Expert program for four years and said she decided to use the new system.”We wanted to move to a web-based system because it had a more improved database to collect data on students and companies,” Bogenschutz said.With Resume Expert, students were required to set up on-campus interviews and to update their resumes during the office’s business hours.With the new system, students can update resumes and sign up for interviews on-line 24-hours a day, she said.Pamela Park-Curry, director of Career Services at the arts and sciences college, said that if students already have their resumes on the office’s database, they will not have to pay the $25 fee.Although hundreds of students are registered with each college’s Career Services office, there isn’t any way of determining how many students have gotten jobs through the resume services, Park-Curry said.Still, Bogenschutz said students are excited about the new system and have been giving it positive reviews.Heidi Stenson, a junior majoring in agricultural communication, is eager to use the new system. “I think it will be a lot more convenient for students and employers,” she said. “Now I can update my resume whenever I have time instead of having to make it to Career Services when it’s open.”Because the new system can help students get in contact with companies, both directors said they hope it will increase the number of students using a resume program.”Companies call all the time looking for resumes and even internship employers call,” Park-Curry said. “It’s not just a program for graduating seniors, it’s for people as soon as they transfer (into their college).”Angela Fielder, recruiter coordinator for the arts and sciences Career Services, said that in the past three years, 19,122 resumes were sent to 640 companies.