Tips for Writing Letters of Recommendation
Pass these tips on to your recommenders
to save them time and improve your letters of recommendation.
10 Tips for Recommenders
- Review a copy of the applicant's
personal statement or application essays so that your letter of recommendation
can dovetail with--not conflict with or duplicate--the rest of the application.
- Ask the applicant to supply
you with additional information like a resume.
- Describe your qualifications
for comparing the applicant to other applicants.
I have been teaching for twenty
years and have advised approximately 450 students on independent research
projects over the last five years.
I have personally supervised ten
interns every summer for the last five years plus worked with over two
hundred college graduates in my capacity as trainer for Big Bank Corp.
- Discuss how well you know
the applicant.
I was able to get to know Mr.
Doe because he made it a point to attend two of my sections every week
when only one was required.
Ms. Smith
reported directly to me for two years prior to her well-deserved promotion
to the position of Senior in our Big Six Accounting Firm.
- Choose two to three qualities
that you observed in the applicant.
The combination of tenacity, analytical
abilities, and good communications skills found in Mr. Doe is truly
unique.
- In discussing those qualities,
support your statements with specific instances in which he or she demonstrated
those attributes. Be as concrete and detailed as possible.
He is the only student I ever
had who came to all my office hours as part of a relentless, and ultimately
successful, drive to master financial theory. He was one of just ten
percent in the class to receive an A.
Because of Jane's writing skills,
I didn't hesitate to ask her to write a report which was used by our
PAC as the basis for a major policy statement. Congressman X eventually
used the statement, based on Jane's sophisticated 20-page analysis of
Middle East politics, in lobbying for increased funding.
- Try to quantify the student's
strengths or rank him or her vis-a-vis other applicants that you have
observed.
- Avoid generalities and platitudes.
- Include some mild criticism,
typically the flip-side of a strength.
The only fault I have encountered
in him is his retiring nature. His modesty sometimes hides a young man
of remarkable strength and broad interests.
Occasionally, her fortitude and
persistence can turn into stubbornness, but usually her good nature
and level-headedness prevail.
- Discuss the applicant's potential
in his or her chosen field.
I enthusiastically recommend Mr.
Doe to your business school. This well-rounded student will be a fine
businessperson.
With her exceptional leadership,
writing, and quantitative skills, Ms. Smith will be an outstanding strategic
consultant and a credit to the business school she attends.
By Linda Abraham, Founder and President of Accepted.com
For information on how Accepted.com can help you, please see our
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