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Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 2:51 pm
by BxBob0711
So I've been trying to email my professor for about 2 weeks regarding my LOR and he hasn't responded. Upon calling my college it seems he's taken a leave of absence and he is extremely ill. Regardless of whether or not I get the letter from him I hope he recovers! Now though I only have one solid LOR. He was the only other teacher I developed a bond with and took more than one class with. I took my last class over the summer, got an A, and still have the work I did for that professor. Should I chance writing him and asking him if he can write me one and give him my work to look over to refresh his memory if need be? Many of the schools I'm applying to such as Fordham say LORs aren't necessary but they'll accept up to three. If I just submit my one great one does anyone think that would suffice? Thank you all for reading.
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:00 pm
by krad
BxBob0711 wrote:So I've been trying to email my professor for about 2 weeks regarding my LOR and he hasn't responded. Upon calling my college it seems he's taken a leave of absence and he is extremely ill. Regardless of whether or not I get the letter from him I hope he recovers! Now though I only have one solid LOR. He was the only other teacher I developed a bond with and took more than one class with. I took my last class over the summer, got an A, and still have the work I did for that professor. Should I chance writing him and asking him if he can write me one and give him my work to look over to refresh his memory if need be? Many of the schools I'm applying to such as Fordham say LORs aren't necessary but they'll accept up to three. If I just submit my one great one does anyone think that would suffice? Thank you all for reading.
One letter 'would suffice' if it is all that's required by the school.
I'm curious to see what others say, but my first thought would be:
Look at the number of LORs recommended by the schools (on LSAC they post required/recommended/accepted), not just what's required. Most people will be submitting what is recommended, I'd imagine. If you can get a decent LOR from the mentioned professor, then I would try for it, but if you think it will hold up applications into January, then maybe go without it for now and submit it if you get WL?
I'm sorry about what happened with the original writer, both for his sake and yours

Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:14 pm
by hokie
BxBob0711 wrote:So I've been trying to email my professor for about 2 weeks regarding my LOR and he hasn't responded. Upon calling my college it seems he's taken a leave of absence and he is extremely ill. Regardless of whether or not I get the letter from him I hope he recovers! Now though I only have one solid LOR. He was the only other teacher I developed a bond with and took more than one class with. I took my last class over the summer, got an A, and still have the work I did for that professor. Should I chance writing him and asking him if he can write me one and give him my work to look over to refresh his memory if need be? Many of the schools I'm applying to such as Fordham say LORs aren't necessary but they'll accept up to three. If I just submit my one great one does anyone think that would suffice? Thank you all for reading.
I would check to see how many is required, then what is recommended. If your numbers are competitive for a given school, I don't think that lack of a one recommendation from the recommended number will have large grave impacts on your app (you might want to write an addendum though). However, if it is indeed required, I would send a polite email to the professor inquiring about his health/giving best wishes while stating you need an additional application and that you feel that he would be the best judge of your work ethic, academic performance, etc. Another method would be to ask him to fill out a evaluation (it is much simpler and less complications IMO).
Did you take any internships (or WE if out of school)? Having a professional LOR for backup might not be a bad idea.
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:25 pm
by whymeohgodno
I asked this same question before. Most TLSers said if the school recommends 2 but I only come up with 1 it might hurt me...a lot.
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:30 pm
by hokie
whymeohgodno wrote:I asked this same question before. Most TLSers said if the school recommends 2 but I only come up with 1 it might hurt me...a lot.
ooo sorry

; was unaware of that. Well then, I'm going to let others respond b/c I really don't have any decisively great answers to give......GL though!
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:34 pm
by theskippa10
I would look elsewhere. If he took a leave because he ill, he is probably hospitalized or in a state where he cannot write a letter. And if he did, it probably wouldn't be good. If I was a professor in that situation, and unless the student was my protege or something, the most i would write is a form letter, and if I was in a bad mood even worse.
It sucks for both of you, but on top of the letter probably not being great, its not proper in my mind.
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:36 pm
by krad
theskippa10 wrote:I would look elsewhere. If he took a leave because he ill, he is probably hospitalized or in a state where he cannot write a letter. And if he did, it probably wouldn't be good. If I was a professor in that situation, and unless the student was my protege or something, the most i would write is a form letter, and if I was in a bad mood even worse.
It sucks for both of you, but on top of the letter probably not being great, its not proper in my mind.
This is why I think you should talk to the other professor you mentioned, especially since others are saying 2 letters are pretty much necessary...
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:52 pm
by mst
Do you have an advisers or professional bosses that could step in? I think it's better to have one solid academic and 1 solid involvement/professional letter than to have 1 academic one alone...
Re: Prof to write a LOR gravely ill
Posted: Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:53 pm
by 094320
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