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Create CVThe education section on a security guard resume should clearly show that you meet basic job requirements and have relevant training. Most employers in the U.S. require at least a high school diploma or GED, plus any security-related certifications.
At minimum, include:
School name
Degree or diploma (High School Diploma or GED)
Graduation or completion date
Location (city, state)
Add relevant training if applicable:
Security guard training programs
CPR or First Aid certification
Conflict de-escalation training
The placement of your education section depends entirely on your experience level.
Place education after your work experience. Employers care more about your hands-on security work.
Place education near the top, right after your summary. This helps show you meet minimum qualifications.
Experienced guards → Education last
Entry-level or no experience → Education first
This is one of the most important structural decisions for your resume.
Use a clean, consistent format that hiring managers can scan in seconds.
Degree or Diploma
School Name, City, State
Graduation Date
High School Diploma
Lincoln High School, Dallas, TX
Graduated: May 2020
Keep formatting consistent across your entire resume.
Surveillance or access control training
Report writing or incident documentation training
Keep it simple, relevant, and easy to scan.
Here are real-world examples based on different candidate types.
High School Diploma
Jefferson High School, Chicago, IL
Graduated: June 2022
Relevant Training:
Basic Security Procedures Workshop
Emergency Response Fundamentals
High School Diploma
Roosevelt High School, Phoenix, AZ
Graduated: May 2018
Certifications:
State Licensed Security Guard
CPR and First Aid Certified
Conflict De-escalation Training
GED Certificate
New York State Education Department
Completed: 2021
Additional Training:
Surveillance Monitoring Basics
Incident Report Writing
High School Diploma
Central High School, Atlanta, GA
Graduated: May 2015
Relevant Training:
Workplace Safety Certification
Customer Conflict Resolution
Access Control Systems Basics
Follow this exact process to build your education section correctly.
For most security roles, this is:
High School Diploma
GED
Do not include middle school or irrelevant education.
Always include city and state for U.S. resumes.
Use:
Exact month/year if recent
Just year if older
This is where you strengthen your resume.
Only include training that connects to:
Safety
Security
Observation
Emergency response
Communication
If you have multiple certifications, consider a separate section.
If you don’t have a college degree, you are still fully qualified for most security roles.
High school diploma or GED
Security license (state-specific)
Reliability and alertness
Basic training and certifications
Use this structure:
GED Certificate
California Department of Education
Completed: 2020
Relevant Training:
Basic Security Guard Training (40 hours)
First Aid & CPR Certified
Conflict Management Techniques
Your training matters more than your degree in this field.
If you’re just starting out, your education section becomes a key selling point.
Recent graduation
Any security-related coursework or workshops
School activities that show responsibility
High School Diploma
Westfield High School, Houston, TX
Graduated: May 2023
Relevant Training:
Emergency Preparedness Workshop
Basic Surveillance Awareness
Team Safety Protocol Training
ROTC participation
Volunteer security roles (events, school functions)
Use this template to build your section quickly.
[Diploma or Certification]
[School Name], [City, State]
[Graduation or Completion Date]
Relevant Training:
[Training 1]
[Training 2]
[Training 3]
Certifications (optional):
Small formatting details can impact readability and hiring decisions.
Avoid long paragraphs. Use short lines and consistent spacing.
List your most recent education first.
Do NOT include:
GPA (unless required)
Irrelevant coursework
Outdated or unrelated training
Match formatting with the rest of your resume.
Clear, simple formatting
Relevant training included
Certifications visible
Correct placement based on experience
Overloading with irrelevant education
Hiding certifications inside paragraphs
Placing education first when you have strong experience
Missing graduation details
Avoid these errors that weaken your resume.
Stick to education that supports your job readiness.
In security, certifications are often more important than formal education.
Putting education first when you have years of experience can hurt your resume flow.
Keep it short and structured.
From a recruiter’s perspective, the education section is checked quickly.
They look for:
Minimum requirement met (High School Diploma or GED)
Security training or licensing
Any signs of reliability or structured learning
They do NOT spend time analyzing this section unless:
You’re entry-level
You lack experience
The role requires specific certifications
That’s why clarity and relevance matter more than length.