nah... my parents would probably get bored. LOL
yeah, true. Well, here's tips from a person I know:
Asking questions is actually quite good if you've got more than a 15 minute slot. Having said that, know as much as possible about the gig you're going for. Don't give your interviewer any inkling that you're anything less than 100% committed. Asking "when are the holidays?" for Co-Op isn't recommended. Know everything that's on your resume (I think I get to that
below)
[Also co-op] "Describe a situation in your past work history where you made an improvement to the workplace. How was that improvement measured?"
Having some interesting or funny experience as a 'conversation piece' that your interviewer can relate to makes them remember you over Joe and Bob when the cull is on.
[Malcolm Chaikin] "If you could only be a florist or a coal miner, which one would you choose and why?" - be careful with scenario questions and think before you respond: in many cases you can actually ask to return to the question later. A florist is someone creative, perhaps artistic, sensitive to personality and cultural differences. A coal miner could be associated with hard work, willingness to be part of a team and looking out for co-workers etc.
These days almost every interview contains some sort of equity question, asking how you associate with people from diverse backgrounds. Particularly for the commerce co-ops or where you're dealing with people, sometimes they will throw in an ethics question too "what does integrity mean to you"... prepare a response for this.
Lying about your abilities - If your claim something that's out of the ordinary, you'll be quizzed on your experiences. Don't put down on your application form that you can play five instruments unless you CAN actually do it, well. This year a girl was booted out of UNSW's medicine interview round when someone passed her a guitar and she went to water.