Your Star Story→ Experience Bullets – Assignment
Your STAR Story → Résumé Bullets
In this step, you will get ready to turn one real STAR story from your own life into clear résumé bullets that show your impact. You will write the bullets in the next unit.
Quick Reminder: STAR and Bullet Formula

In Milestone 3, you learned how to tell STAR stories about your barriers. Here is a quick review and how it connects to résumé bullets.
- Situation – where and when the story happens
- Task – what needed to change or the goal
- Action – what you did
- Result – what changed because of your actions
On a résumé, we use a short formula: Action verb + what you did + how it helped or what changed.
Step 1: Choose one real STAR story
For the next assignment, you will pick one real story where you faced a barrier and took action. It can be from:
- Milestone 3 (language, tech, papers, bias, confidence)
- Work, volunteering, community, or family responsibilities
If you feel stuck, choose a story you already wrote about in your reflections or barrier activities. You do not need a “perfect” story – just a real example where your actions helped.
Example: From STAR story to bullets
Short STAR story
In a busy call center, a new co-worker often sent reports late and felt stressed. I wanted to help him reduce mistakes. I created a simple checklist and stayed 20 minutes after my shift twice a week to practice with him. After two weeks, his reports were on time with fewer errors, and he felt more confident.
Résumé bullets version
- Supported a new co-worker by teaching a simple checklist, which helped him submit on-time reports with fewer errors.
- Stayed after shifts twice a week to practice reports, resulting in more accurate daily data.
- Contributed to a calmer team environment by offering clear steps and encouragement during busy periods.
Notice the pattern: each bullet starts with an action verb and includes a small change or result (on-time reports, fewer errors, calmer team).
Sentence frames you can use
In the next unit, you will write 2–4 bullets about your own STAR story. These frames can help you start:
- Supported [person/group] by [what you did], which led to [positive change].
- Improved [task/process] by [what you changed], resulting in [better result].
- Adapted to [new tool/situation] by [action you took], which helped [team/customer outcome].
- Resolved [problem] by [key steps], which reduced [errors/wait time/stress].
You can keep your language simple. The most important part is to show what you did and how it helped someone or improved the situation.
Remember: this is a draft, not a test. Your bullets do not have to be perfect English. You can always edit and improve them later.
When you are ready, click Next to go to the assignment unit, where you will write 2–4 bullets about your own STAR story.
Your STAR story as résumé bullet points
In this assignment, you will turn one real STAR story from your life into 2–4 résumé bullet points that show what you did and how it helped.
Step 1: Choose one STAR story
Choose one story where you faced a barrier and took action. It can be:
- From Milestone 3 (language, tech, papers, bias, confidence)
- From work, volunteering, community, or family responsibilities
If you feel stuck, pick a story you already wrote about. It does not need to be perfect. It only needs to be real.
Step 2: Use the bullet formula
A strong résumé bullet usually follows this pattern:
Action verb + what you did + how it helped or what changed
Example bullets:
- Supported a new co-worker by teaching a simple checklist, which led to on-time reports with fewer errors.
- Improved customer wait times by organizing a clear ticket line, resulting in calmer service during busy hours.
- Adapted to a new ticketing system by doing extra practice, which helped the team find cases faster.
Notice that each bullet starts with a verb and shows a small result (fewer errors, calmer service, faster work).
Step 3: Sentence frames to help you write
You will write 2–4 bullets in the assignment box below. You can use these frames to start:
- Supported [person/group] by [what you did], which led to [positive change].
- Improved [task/process] by [what you changed], resulting in [better result].
- Adapted to [new tool/situation] by [action you took], which helped [team/customer outcome].
- Resolved [problem] by [key steps], which reduced [errors/wait time/stress].
If you feel ready, you can also use words like persistent, proactive, resolved, resilient to show how you handled the barrier.
Step 4: Write and submit your bullets
In the assignment box below, write 2–4 bullet points for one STAR story. Each bullet should show what you did and, if possible, what changed.
Use this quick checklist before you submit:
- Did I start each bullet with a verb (helped, supported, organized, adapted, resolved)?
- Did I show how my action helped someone or improved the situation?
- Did I avoid starting bullets with “I” and keep them short and clear?
Focus on clear meaning more than perfect grammar. This is a draft you can improve later with feedback. When you are ready, type your bullets in the assignment field and click Submit.