Letters of Recommendation
Letters of Recommendation
Selecting the
right people
How to go
about doing it
Writing the
recommendation yourself
LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION
Selecting the right people to recommend you :
Do they know you well enough
You don't want to go for someone who doesn't remember your name. Which is why it's always
prudent to stick with immediate superiors or professors (in an academic setting). More
importantly, will the university believe that they know you well enough. If the CEO of the firm
where you interned is recommending you, make sure it's clear that your interaction with the
recommender is apparent in the write-up. The University could very well question the credibility of
a recommendation if it appears to have been manipulated.
How much credibility are they likely to hold with the university.
In academia, professors are likely to carry more weight compared to lab-assistants. In any case,
make sure that the professional competence of the person recommending you is apparent.
Are they likely to give you a positive recommendation
And you want to be doubly sure of this. You may want to stay away from the unreliable ones. If
necessary, approach the person and ask them upfront. Since they're likely to have written
recommendations for applicants before, it's not too much to expect them to understand your
anxiety. However, use your discretion in case you aren't too sure of how he/she will react.
Get some variety into your recommendations
For multiple recommendations, look out for whether the recommendations are likely to rehash the
same aspects of your personality. As far as possible, get recommendations from people who've
interacted with you in different situations. For example, an engineering student would be well
advised to get recommendations from a professor, a lab instructor and someone like a project
guide. The professor could attest to the student's keen sense of class participation. The instructor
could focus on his/her skills in the laboratory and the project-guide on his/her flair for research
and getting to the root of problems.
Co-ordinate your recommendations with the rest of your application
If the somewhere in rest of your application you've focussed on something like a particular
project, it would be particularly useful to try and build on that by providing a recommendation from
the person who guided you through that project. Likewise, if you've talked about your biggest
achievement at work, how about getting your boss at the time to recommend you
LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION
How to go about doing it
Make a list of persons you are going to ask to recommend you.
If possible, jot down a few extra names whom you could depend on in case of an emergency.
Make sure they are willing to do so.
Talk it over with them. See if they are reasonably sure they'd like to do for you. Be clear that
recommendations are a pain for everyone involved, but most so for those who have to actually
write them up. No one enjoys writing recommendations. And so you can't depend on someone
who isn't too sure he/she'd like to recommend you.
Make sure they know what you want to do
If they knew you were interested in marketing research and not finance, maybe they wouldn't
have said that you'd be a great asset to the finance class. Of course, the persons recommending
you are often busy people, so you may want to give them a note alongside the rest of the material
we've listed in our next point.
ShowTime
Each of the persons recommending you deserves a copy of your resume. Along with that, give
them the original recommendation form and a copy too. In this copy, give them points that you'd
like covered in their write-up. If the form asks them to list an incident where you displayed
leadership skills, it'd make it easier for them if you have provided them with a few incidents that
you think would be suitable. Let them do the descriptive part. Your job is to make sure they
remember a few relevant incidents. You could even attach a note saying that you'd rather they
talk about your pet project, etc.
Related Issues
Make your timeframe absolutely clear. And while we're on the topic, be considerate and give them
a few weeks to prepare your recommendation. Be sure that you've given yourself a buffer of a
week or two to make up for unexpected exigencies. Also clear up whether they'd like to mail the
recommendation themselves or whether they want you to do the needful. Consult the application
brochure to make sure you're aware of what your university prefers
LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION
If you are writing the recommendation yourself
Make them sound different
Writing all your recommendations in the same style is just asking for trouble. Remember that
these recommendations will stay on your record for a long time to come. So even if you aren't
caught during the application phase, it's quite possible that they'll come to haunt you, say, when
you're begging for an assistantship.
Don't use too many superlatives.
None, if possible. And never in pairs. Saying that you're the 'most brilliant' student to have walked
the halls of the college is poor English and likely to result in that recommendation getting
excluded if your transcripts don't back it up.
Make it believable
There's no doubt that you're the brightest student your professor has ever seen (like the dozen
others who have asked him to recommend them). But if your professor puts you in the top 5% in
every category that he's been asked to rank you, and your transcripts show that you averaged in
the bottom 25% of your class, it's bound to raise some eyebrows. So take it easy on those
adjectives and percentages. Make sure you match up the assessments in the recommendation
with the hard figures that your transcripts reveal.
Try and talk about aspects of your personality that haven't been covered elsewhere
The recommendation really is a magnificent opportunity to do this. So instead of getting your
professor to describe your entire project (which you've already talked about in your
resume/essay), say that he saw you grow during the year that you were assisting him on the
project. How your already superior fundamentals in the subject were reinforced by your having
developed considerable finesse and accuracy in the laboratory.
Refer to the essay writing part of this site
Think of it like an essay. In fact, it is an essay. So for god's sake, give it structure and flow; and
work on that content.
Try to get across outstanding achievements
Read your resume and essay again. See if this recommendation provides you with a chance to
bolster some of the claims you've made elsewhere.
Co-ordinate with your goals
Think of what you'd like to be doing in the near future. For example, science and engineering
students generally seek assistantships in research or teaching once they're at their university. It's
quite likely that the person reviewing your application for an assistantship will look at your
application recommendations. If someone recommending you has said something about your
having presented a seminar on 'Big dams are examples of poor engineering', or having
conducted outstanding research as part of your project, it would substantially add to your chances
of clinching the assistantship.
Use discretion and good judgement
Since you're depending on others for this part of the application, your staying sensible is of
utmost importance. Everything from scheduling meetings with the person recommending, to
giving them a deadline, to suggesting what they should highlight in their assessment requires a
lot of tact on your behalf. So stick you
A highly research-oriented program will want to know primarily about your skills
as a researcher. If you are applying for graduate study in an helping profession
like counseling, your references may be asked to comment on your interpersonal
skills. If you are applying for graduate training in a profession, e.g. Business,
Education or Nursing, your references may be asked to comment on your work in
the field.
Some programs have a form which they ask your references to fill out, answering
short answer type questions, or asking your references to rank you among the
students they have taught. Other programs ask for the same information in an
actual letter format. Some programs combine the two they ask your reference to
fill out a form, and invite them to make general comments in letter form.
by checking the gradebook. I would certainly offer to do at least that for any
prospective reference-letter writer.
The possibility that you may choose not to go immediately on to graduate school
is one more good reason to cultivate and maintain a professional relationship
with the faculty at your undergraduate institution(s). Keep up with the field and
their research interests. Take opportunities to ask them questions about their
work. If you are genuinely interested in their work, it should be easier to get
references from them.
letters are your academic advisor, professors of classes you were active in or
people you've worked for. It's a good idea to have not only a couple of
references from inside of your department, but to demonstrate diversity by
having at least one letter written by a faculty member from another department
or college.
Schedule a meeting with the professor to talk about the scholarship or
fellowship. Use the meeting to explain why you think you could be competitive.
Then ask the professor if he or she would have the time to write the letter and if
he or she would feel comfortable writing a supportive and positive
recommendation letter for you for this particular award.
If possible, inform the professor a semester or so ahead of time that you are
considering applying for a scholarship or fellowship and would like him or her
to write you a recommendation letter. The professor will pay closer attention to
your actions and accomplishments and will perhaps keep a running file on you
to use when it comes time to draft the letter.Speak to the professor early enough so
that he or she will have about a month to work on the letter. Since each
recommendation letter must be tailored to the individual and to the award, your
recommender will need plenty of time to complete it. Everyone at CMU has a lot of
work to do, and allowing your professor ample time to complete this task is both a
courtesy and a necessity.
Neatly and thoroughly fill out any portion of the recommender's form that is necessary.
This could be as simple as typing in your name and social security number. You want
to make the task of recommending you as easy as possible for your recommender.
Although the decision is up to you, selection committees recommend that you waive
your right to see the letter when completed. Waiving your right to see the letter is
thought to lend more credibility to the recommender's statements.
Make sure that you provide the recommender with a pre-addressed, stamped envelope
if necessary or with other directions if the letter is to be returned to you.
Follow up with the professor in a couple of weeks to see if he or she needs any
additional information. A call or an e-mail note from you will also serve as a reminder
to the professor if he or she has forgotten to write the letter.
Finally, thank your recommender for taking the time to write the letter and let him or
her know the outcome of the application.
NOTE: Though these tips are especially useful for scholarship and fellowship
recommendation letters, many of them are also useful for graduate school and
employment recommendation letters.
How long and in what capacity have you known the applicant?
What is your judgment of the applicant's maturity and emotional stability?
What is your evaluation of the applicant's capabilities and suitability for graduate education?
What is your evaluation of the applicant's capabilities and suitability for subsequent practice in
the social work profession (i.e., ethical standards, appreciation for a wide range of people,
commitment to social and economic equity)?
Identify areas such as work performance, workload management abilities, leadership ability,
and personal characteristics that you believe might either help or hinder the applicant's
development as an effective social worker.
Other comments.
When a student asks you to write a recommendation letter, make sure that you
understand what the student expects from you. Do you share the student's
perception of his or her achievements? Could you wholeheartedly recommend
the student for this particular award or program? If not, tell the student you may
not be the best person for the task.
Ask the student for his or her resume and statement of purpose. You may also
ask the student for a more detailed list of accomplishments. These items will
spark your memory if it's been awhile since you've worked with the student.
Know what the selection committee is looking for. Read over the application
materials that the student will provide you. If the committee is looking for
scholarship qualities, it is fine to discuss the student's other qualities, but target
your letter and your examples on scholarship.
Take some time to really think about the student and what he or she has
accomplished. What makes a student's application packet stand out from the
others is not only grades and accomplishments, but the specifics of what the
student did and how he or she went about it. Tell a story; compare this student
to all the others you've had throughout the last five years. But, remember, if the
student does not stand out significantly from those other students, you may not
be the best person to write a recommendation letter for the student.
Selection committees normally weed out mediocre application packets before
focusing on the excellent ones. This means that a brief letter with phrases like
"good student" and "hard worker" that aren't substantiated with examples will
get tossed aside in favor of the detailed letter that doesn't just tell but shows
how qualified the student is.
Most committees look not only for what the student has already done but what
he or she has the potential to accomplish. Addressing potential may take a little
more time than discussing past deeds, but it may give the student the edge
over other applicants.
Unlike recommendation letters written for entrance to graduate school, letters
for scholarships and fellowships should not bring up a student's weakness and
then dispel that weakness with a parallel strength. While this technique seems
to show objectivity, it is not a technique that works with these very competitive
awards. Judges have many letters to read and are looking for any reason to
take a candidate out of the running so that they can concentrate on a smaller
core. If a judge sees a negative phrase such as "Although at first Jane
appeared to be a dreamer in class," he or she may never get to "I soon
realized that she was actually thinking one step ahead of my lecture."
Write at least a page and don't be afraid to go into detail in a longer letter.
Committee members have commented that less than a page shows a lack of
enthusiasm. Some have commented that over two pages is a bit long, but
others have said that a letter filled with example after example of the student's
accomplishments and outstanding capabilities is a joy to read.
However long the letter, be sure to print out each page on one side of the
paper only. The back sides of double-sided letters may get lost if they are
photocopied for the committee.
NOTE: Though these tips are especially useful for scholarship and fellowship
recommendation letters, many of them are also useful for graduate school and
employment recommendation letters