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Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Sun Jun 16, 2013 10:51 pm
by SloppyHandwriting
Asked a professor for a LOR and he responded with this:
I'm glad to hear that you did well across the board in your classes. I think it would be a good move for you if you can get in to the [university of awesomeness], and I am happy to recommend you. I would ask that you draft a glowing letter of recommendation for my signature.
How do I draft myself an LOR??
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Sun Jun 16, 2013 11:22 pm
by dsb83
Didn't this thread happen a couple weeks ago?
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 3:57 pm
by transfer57
Listen, I don't care whether your professor has a sense of humor or not, but YOU HAVE TO DO THIS:
Write two letters. One serious, one not. Write the most ridiculous, over-the-top, arrogant, self-exuberant LOR you could possibly think of and send it to your prof. Include phrases such as "This student is destined to revolutionize the American legal system."
Send the joke first. Wait about 2 or 3 hours then send the real one.
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 3:59 pm
by transfer57
transfer57 wrote:Listen, I don't care whether your professor has a sense of humor or not, but YOU HAVE TO DO THIS:
Write two letters. One serious, one not. Write the most ridiculous, over-the-top, arrogant, self-exuberant LOR you could possibly think of and send it to your prof. Include phrases such as "This student is destined to revolutionize the American legal system."
Send the joke first. Wait about 2 or 3 hours then send the real one.
For the serious one, don't over-think it. Most prof's probably have a template they use. Just say generic things like "XXXX contributed greatly in class discussion, was always respectful of differing viewpoints, and was a valuable addition to our student body."
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Mon Jun 17, 2013 9:35 pm
by dsb83
Here's a short thread on the same subject from a couple weeks ago,
http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/v ... 7&t=210529
I actually remembered you, Sloppy, asking then and thought "What the hell?" Just put yourself in their situation and write what you would write. Be positive, sell yourself, and work in your reasons for transferring. Some call the LOR requirement a formality for transfers, so I wouldn't stress too much. Good luck!
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Tue Jun 18, 2013 12:58 am
by SloppyHandwriting
dsb83 wrote:Here's a short thread on the same subject from a couple weeks ago,
http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/v ... 7&t=210529
I actually remembered you, Sloppy, asking then and thought "What the hell?" Just put yourself in their situation and write what you would write. Be positive, sell yourself, and work in your reasons for transferring. Some call the LOR requirement a formality for transfers, so I wouldn't stress too much. Good luck!
This might be one of the more challenging formalities! Thanks for the insight, guys. I am soon going to be "the student that revolutionized the way I (the professor) thought about Constitutional Law."
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2013 2:41 pm
by Tigress
SloppyHandwriting wrote:Asked a professor for a LOR and he responded with this:
I'm glad to hear that you did well across the board in your classes. I think it would be a good move for you if you can get in to the [university of awesomeness], and I am happy to recommend you. I would ask that you draft a glowing letter of recommendation for my signature.
How do I draft myself an LOR??
Is this ethical?
Re: Writing Letter of Recommendation for yourself?
Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2013 2:43 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
Yes. This comes up a lot. Professors regularly ask students to draft a letter because they're too busy or don't know the student very well. The professor has the opportunity to revise whatever they disagree with or would say differently, and when they sign the letter, they endorse what's in it.
Obviously you don't suggest to a letter-writer that you draft the letter. But if the professor suggests this, it's fine.