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Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 4:36 pm
by Four Winds
Hi all,

I just finished up undergrad last month and I'm taking a few gap years to work before going to law school.

Would it be better to go ahead and ask a couple of professors NOW to write me letters of rec? That way I'm still fresh in their mind/I don't have to worry about it next year when I'm applying. I casually mentioned it to a professor who seemed to think the "later the date of the letter, the better" but I don't really know where he's getting that from.

Thanks!

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 4:41 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
I think there's a perception that a letter dated 2 years before you attend would look kind of stale and out of date. The prof certainly wouldn't be able to say anything about what you were up to during those 2 years. So I wouldn't try to get the actual letters now, but if you ask the profs now and they say yes, and they know your timeline, they can either draft something now, or make notes about you, or something along those lines to help them write a better letter when they need it.

(Or just ask the profs how they'd prefer to do it. I don't think a letter dated 2013 if you're applying 2014-15 is the end of the world, but a recent letter does probably look a little better.)

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 4:43 pm
by politics89
I'm a year out from school and decided to apply next fall so I just sent the people I wanted to write for me a quick email just being like hey this is what I'm up to, I hope you can write me a letter next year. They seeemed very receptive. You might just want to try and keep a touch a bit.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 5:08 pm
by Humbert Humbert
Four Winds wrote:Hi all,

I just finished up undergrad last month and I'm taking two gap years to work in NYC before going to law school (so I'm planning to apply in Fall 2014).

Would it be better to go ahead and ask a couple of professors NOW to write me letters of rec? That way I'm still fresh in their mind/I don't have to worry about it next year when I'm applying. I casually mentioned it to a professor who seemed to think the "later the date of the letter, the better" but I don't really know where he's getting that from.

Thanks!
I graduated in spring 2012 and am applying to law school this fall. I got a letter from someone in my current firm, and a letter from a college professor. I asked for both in early July, letting them know that I needed them by Sept. 1. The professor had no issue with this. He asked for an essay I wrote in his class, a copy of my resume, a copy of my transcript, and a brief background on what I'm up to now. He remembered me perfectly well and I'm sure his letter will be solid.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 8:11 pm
by TheSpanishMain
How well do you know the professor? Do you have a mentor relationship with him/her? Did you work on some big project/senior thesis/publication where you worked closely with them over an extended period of time? Or is it just like, "Yeah, Four Winds took my English 305 class. He got an A and was a good student."

If it's the former, I would say hold off on getting the LORs and just touch base with them from time to time over the next few years. I don't mean deluge their inbox constantly, but just an email every six months would be fine.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 10:39 pm
by Ti Malice
Humbert Humbert wrote:
Four Winds wrote:Hi all,

I just finished up undergrad last month and I'm taking two gap years to work in NYC before going to law school (so I'm planning to apply in Fall 2014).

Would it be better to go ahead and ask a couple of professors NOW to write me letters of rec? That way I'm still fresh in their mind/I don't have to worry about it next year when I'm applying. I casually mentioned it to a professor who seemed to think the "later the date of the letter, the better" but I don't really know where he's getting that from.

Thanks!
I graduated in spring 2012 and am applying to law school this fall. I got a letter from someone in my current firm, and a letter from a college professor. I asked for both in early July, letting them know that I needed them by Sept. 1. The professor had no issue with this. He asked for an essay I wrote in his class, a copy of my resume, a copy of my transcript, and a brief background on what I'm up to now. He remembered me perfectly well and I'm sure his letter will be solid.
You should really try to get two academic letters.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Wed Jul 31, 2013 3:22 pm
by Humbert Humbert
Ti Malice wrote:
Humbert Humbert wrote:
Four Winds wrote:Hi all,

I just finished up undergrad last month and I'm taking two gap years to work in NYC before going to law school (so I'm planning to apply in Fall 2014).

Would it be better to go ahead and ask a couple of professors NOW to write me letters of rec? That way I'm still fresh in their mind/I don't have to worry about it next year when I'm applying. I casually mentioned it to a professor who seemed to think the "later the date of the letter, the better" but I don't really know where he's getting that from.

Thanks!
I graduated in spring 2012 and am applying to law school this fall. I got a letter from someone in my current firm, and a letter from a college professor. I asked for both in early July, letting them know that I needed them by Sept. 1. The professor had no issue with this. He asked for an essay I wrote in his class, a copy of my resume, a copy of my transcript, and a brief background on what I'm up to now. He remembered me perfectly well and I'm sure his letter will be solid.
You should really try to get two academic letters.
Why? The one from the professor will attest to my academic strengths, while the one from the partner at my firm will speak to my professionalism, maturity, substantive work experience, etc. The latter is something K-JD applicants won't have, so I feel it is worth emphasizing. The letter itself is well-written, and it's from a partner who has held (or currently holds) teaching positions a handful of the schools I am applying to, so I think I'll be well-served by it.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Wed Jul 31, 2013 5:44 pm
by Young Marino
I'm still waiting on my 2 letters of recommendation for this cycle. Both profs agreed to write one but they've been M.I.A. all summer.. I think the beginning of the academic year is when you should be expecting it.. At least that's when I'm hoping to get mine

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Wed Jul 31, 2013 7:26 pm
by magickware
ALeal90 wrote:I'm still waiting on my 2 letters of recommendation for this cycle. Both profs agreed to write one but they've been M.I.A. all summer.. I think the beginning of the academic year is when you should be expecting it.. At least that's when I'm hoping to get mine
I regret waiting so long (asked in mid July), for my letters. Professors haven't responded yet, and I realized that they're probably not going to bother checking their mail during summer break.

I want to send another letter, but I'm scared of them feeling like I'm being a pest.

Re: Letter of Rec Timing

Posted: Wed Jul 31, 2013 9:27 pm
by Ti Malice
Humbert Humbert wrote:
Ti Malice wrote:
Humbert Humbert wrote:
Four Winds wrote:Hi all,

I just finished up undergrad last month and I'm taking two gap years to work in NYC before going to law school (so I'm planning to apply in Fall 2014).

Would it be better to go ahead and ask a couple of professors NOW to write me letters of rec? That way I'm still fresh in their mind/I don't have to worry about it next year when I'm applying. I casually mentioned it to a professor who seemed to think the "later the date of the letter, the better" but I don't really know where he's getting that from.

Thanks!
I graduated in spring 2012 and am applying to law school this fall. I got a letter from someone in my current firm, and a letter from a college professor. I asked for both in early July, letting them know that I needed them by Sept. 1. The professor had no issue with this. He asked for an essay I wrote in his class, a copy of my resume, a copy of my transcript, and a brief background on what I'm up to now. He remembered me perfectly well and I'm sure his letter will be solid.
You should really try to get two academic letters.
Why? The one from the professor will attest to my academic strengths, while the one from the partner at my firm will speak to my professionalism, maturity, substantive work experience, etc. The latter is something K-JD applicants won't have, so I feel it is worth emphasizing. The letter itself is well-written, and it's from a partner who has held (or currently holds) teaching positions a handful of the schools I am applying to, so I think I'll be well-served by it.
Because, to the extent that they care about LORs at all, adcomms strongly prefer letters from people who have evaluated your academic work in an academic setting. I never said not to include your employer's LOR. That's fine as an extra letter, but two academic letters should always be included, especially when you haven't been out of undergrad for many years.