The Career Objectives Report went by rather quickly. Because there was limited research involved, and there was room for a bit of personality to come through, it was rather pleasant to do. The most interesting part by far was using my skills in Microsoft Office to help make the assignment more attractive and engaging. The writing process was painless: I started with a basic outline: I created a skeleton for each section (objectives, plan, and timeline), usually just a set of bullet points, and then fleshed it out until it I was satisfied with the amount of detail. I then spent a moderate amount of time on the aforementioned Microsoft Office skills part of the process, formatting and arranging the document to make it look presentable.
This is the assignment for which I received the most feedback, which is understandable as this was the first major assignment of the course. My main takeaway is that I should have described my course of action at the start rather than explaining my reasoning first and having the action as the conclusion of the paragraph. In the future, I suppose I will place the action at the start of the paragraph and add any explanations or reasoning after the fact. Despite my personal preference for explanations followed by a logical conclusion, I cannot project this onto everyone and must acknowledge that other preferences exist and that many people prefer a document that is easy to skim for takeaways at the outset.