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Wait for Letter?

Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2017 8:16 pm
by vuleaxsup
Everything is good to go (Essay, Optional Essays, etc...) except one letter. I currently have two letters: one from a professor I did research and published with for several years but who never taught me in a real class and another from an internship employer who I worked closely with (lots of one-to-one) as a research assistant (probably worked 5 mo full time in total). I also have a letter from a professor (A) I had two classes with, but I expect it to be a "did well in class" essay. I'm waiting for another letter from a professor (B) who I had one class with, but whose letter is definitely better than letter A.

I'm torn between waiting for letter B, submitting now and adding B later, and submitting with A, etc... I'm a K-JD so is my lack of true academic letters going to sink me? For reference, I'm aiming for T14.

Re: Wait for Letter?

Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2017 9:34 pm
by OakBrook2021
You should really try to have 2 academic letters of recommendation

Re: Wait for Letter?

Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2017 9:42 pm
by UVA2B
This is a pretty minor concern. If you're an otherwise strong candidate, your LORs won't matter. If you're a stretch, your LORs aren't going to save you. If you're borderline for the schools you want, the LORs are really unlikely to sway admissions one way or another.

That said, take the time to get your best LORs. Because you have no professional WE, that means you need academic LORs.

Obligatory "don't be a K-JD" advice. Work for a few years. Come back to law school when you've better figured out adulthood.

Re: Wait for Letter?

Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2017 10:25 pm
by vuleaxsup
OakBrook2021 wrote:You should really try to have 2 academic letters of recommendation
What's the consensus about profs you've done research with? Isn't research simply academia?

Re: Wait for Letter?

Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2017 11:56 am
by goldenbear2020
LORs are about quality, not quantity. I would go with the first two + B, and leave out A. That would be two academic letters + one employer letter.