I am often asked to write letters of recommendation for students. In fact, I am asked ALL THE TIME. I get at least 10-20 requests a semester. That is 1-2 per week. They tend to come in spurts as all the deadlines for pharmacy school, medical school, graduate school, scholarships etc. tend to cluster around the same dates.
I have some students in more than one class. I have some students in my research group. These are the students whose letters are easy to write because I see them daily, see their work daily, I really know what they are capable of. But, today I was working on a letter for a student that I only had for one semester. This student is applying to medical school and has a great shot at it. I am writing the letter for an entire committee of faculty (4) as some schools require this type of letter (one letter, instead of 4 separate letters). A number of things stood out to me about her...these things make it EASY for me to write a letter for her even though I don't know her well. This got me thinking about how a student can go about getting a good letter.
I will summarize the pointers for getting a good letter below.
1.) Ask the right people. Ask people who know you well. If there aren't people who know you well, then you might need to work on your interpersonal skills and get to know the faculty a little better!!!
2.) Give the person writing the letter PLENTY of notice. Like at least 2 weeks, preferably more. I have been really busy lately and it has taken me a while to do my recent letters.
3.) Give the person writing the letter a copy of your latest resume and some of the application materials you turned in (such as a personal statement). These items help them learn even more about you so that they can write a letter that says more than "Bob made an A in my class. He came to class on time and did all his homework." Can we say BORING?????
4.) Be noticeable in your departments and majors. Know the faculty, participate in clubs, go to functions. Spend time chatting with your advisor if they have time to talk. Do undergraduate research. Take more classes than are required to get your degree. Try to do the homework problems before asking the instructor to help you finish the problem. Show initiative. Come to office hours. Keep appointments if you make them.
5.) DON'T be a whiner that is late to class or late turning in your homework. Don't be the one that begs to have the test moved every time. If you make a bad grade on a test, do what you can to improve...don't pester the teacher about every half point that they took off of your test. Don't argue with them. It makes you look like a pain in the a$$.
6.) Give clear instructions about what is to be sent to the school (letter and form, form only etc.) and make sure that the address is correct. If the letter can be submitted electronically, provide the correct web address.
7.) Follow up. Give the teacher a week or so and email or call them to remind them to do the letter. We all get busy and things fall off of our to do lists. Its not intentional.
Hope this helps!
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Getting Bad News...DON'T GIVE UP
Ok, so this week was test week. Now, you probably see what I was talking about in class. You cannot procrastinate. All these exams come at the same time. You cannot learn college level work in one day. You need to see your professors in their office hours.
Think about what we talked about the other day. What kind of learner are you? Have you found study methods that work for you? If not, try something else. Go to the tutor center, give yourself more time to study. Study in a group, work problems. Talk about what you are learning.
I hope everyone did well on their exams. I am sooooo happy for everyone that studied and did your best on every exam this week!!! But, if you didn't...please think really hard about what you can do to make improvments. You are not a lost cause at anything. You may just have to work harder than you did in high school. This is the real world.
"One must learn by doing the thing, for though you think you know it, you have no certainty until you try." Aristotle
Think about what we talked about the other day. What kind of learner are you? Have you found study methods that work for you? If not, try something else. Go to the tutor center, give yourself more time to study. Study in a group, work problems. Talk about what you are learning.
I hope everyone did well on their exams. I am sooooo happy for everyone that studied and did your best on every exam this week!!! But, if you didn't...please think really hard about what you can do to make improvments. You are not a lost cause at anything. You may just have to work harder than you did in high school. This is the real world.
"One must learn by doing the thing, for though you think you know it, you have no certainty until you try." Aristotle
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Hanna Hanna Bo Banna!
Do you all remamber that song from when you were a kid? You put the person's name, then sang that rhyming song?
I haven't blogged in a while, been really busy (classes, meetings, having a nice break on Labor Day)...but we sit now waiting to hear if school will be canceled or if we will have an evacuation etc., due to Hanna. Yea, life on the southeast coast. Just so you know, AASU only closes if there is a voluntary evacuation of the islands...so you need to keep going to class until you hear otherwise!
Speaking of women, I am personally stoked that Sarah Palin is the VP nominee. I just think she is great. I love that a woman, outsider, reformer, conservative, mother etc. is in the running. As a working mom myself, it just makes me happy. It can be done, don't let the naysayers fool you. I hope everyone tunes into her speech tonight and gives her a chance.
Next blog will be about what we are talking about in class.... "What kind of learner are you?" Stay tuned!
I haven't blogged in a while, been really busy (classes, meetings, having a nice break on Labor Day)...but we sit now waiting to hear if school will be canceled or if we will have an evacuation etc., due to Hanna. Yea, life on the southeast coast. Just so you know, AASU only closes if there is a voluntary evacuation of the islands...so you need to keep going to class until you hear otherwise!
Speaking of women, I am personally stoked that Sarah Palin is the VP nominee. I just think she is great. I love that a woman, outsider, reformer, conservative, mother etc. is in the running. As a working mom myself, it just makes me happy. It can be done, don't let the naysayers fool you. I hope everyone tunes into her speech tonight and gives her a chance.
Next blog will be about what we are talking about in class.... "What kind of learner are you?" Stay tuned!
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