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Posted
By Andrew Potter On March 22, 2007 @ 8:23 pm In Advice | No
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With distressing regularity,
anyone who has taught in a university for any length of time receives an email
that goes something like this:
Dear Professor Smith,
You probably don’t remember
me, but I was a student in your Intro 101 class back in 200X. After working for
a few years, I’ve decided I would like to go to graduate school, and was
wondering if I could possibly trouble you for a reference letter. I got a 74
per cent in your class, and I have appended my resumé showing what I have been
up to since I graduated. I know this is a shot in the dark, but you are almost
the only professor I could even ask, and I could really use your help.
Sincerely yours,
“A” student
Reference letters are a
necessary part of any application to graduate or professional school, along
with a writing sample, statement of research interest, standardized test
scores, and a transcript. The relative importance of each of these varies
depending on the discipline and department, with grades and test scores
mattering a great deal for admission to law and medicine, whereas humanities
departments tend to pay more attention to the writing sample. Yet backing it
all up are the ubiquitous reference letters, testimonials written on the
student’s behalf speaking to his or her ability, character and personality.
Unfortunately, many students
shoot themselves in the foot when it comes to getting reference letters, and
those who write meek pleas like the one above are making two fundamental
errors. The first is pretty simple to fix: don’t be sheepish or apologetic.
Writing reference letters for students is not a favour that professors grant to
their students, it is one of their professional obligations. Crazy as it seems,
professors want to get their best students into grad schools, and writing
strong letters on their behalf is part of the job.
The second mistake is a bit
harder to fix after the fact. The time to start making your case for a
reference letter is not when you decide to go to graduate school. Rather, you
need to start setting the stage for possible letters when you are still an
undergrad, with your academic future still dimly imagined. This stage is built
on three pillars: your course selection, your choice of professors, and your
behaviour in class.
Start with course selection. It
is hard for profs to get to know you in a class of 200 or 300 students, which
is why you have to find at least a couple of courses, preferably in the upper
years, that have a maximum enrolment of 30 students or so. Take these courses
even if you aren’t particularly interested in the topic, since the attention
and recognition you will get from the professor will more than make up for dull
content.
Second of all, pay attention to
who is teaching the class. At almost every university in Canada a great deal of
instruction is being off-loaded to grad students, adjunct faculty and contract
workers. They tend to be young and desperate, and consequently put a lot of
effort into their teaching. But they are also itinerant workers, with very
little status within the profession. When you go looking for reference letters
a few years down the road it might be hard just finding them, since they could
be literally anywhere in the world. And even when you do track them down,
chances are that they will be either still working on contracts, or even out of
the academic business altogether. In either case, any reference they give you
will carry relatively little weight within the profession. So when selecting
your courses, do a quick check in the department calendar and find out which
instructors are permanent members of the faculty, and take as many of their
classes as you can.
Finally, it is useful to keep
one thing in mind: professors can only write you a good letter if they know who
you are, what you are like, and how your mind works. It is very hard to write a
strong letter for a student when all you can really say is that “so-and-so took
my class and got a B+.” So do all the readings and go to class. And when you
are in class, ask a lot of questions. Then make a point of dropping by during
the prof’s office hours, and pepper him or her with comments about the lecture
or the readings or the assignment. In short, be the annoying keener that
everyone hates.
References aren’t the most
important part of your application, and it would take a truly outstanding
letter to make up for miserable grades or an incompetent writing sample. But
reference letters are a necessary part of your application, and they signal your
acceptance into a community of scholars. If you are an undergraduate student
with even the slightest thought that you might someday want to go on to
graduate school, it is never too early to start working on getting those
letters. Be as strategic and mercenary about it as possible—you have nothing to
apologize for.
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