*~*~*~*Official Letters of Recommendation Questions Thread 2013-2014*~*~*~*

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This thread is for 2014 applicants (those who will be entering medical school in 2014) to ask questions about letters of recommendation.

Any separate threads in Pre-Allo dealing with this topic will be merged into this thread.

Before asking a question, PLEASE READ THE FAQ, both here in this thread AND on the AMCAS website! It is quite possible that your question will have already been answered. If you think that you have a different take on a question in the FAQ, acknowledge this in your question; everyone in pre-allo will be much more likely to help you out if they think you've done due diligence.

For your reference, last year's thread is available here.

Also, each thread has a search function. Please use it before asking your question by clicking the "Search this Thread" button near the top of the page.

This thread is brought to you by the Pre-Allopathic Volunteer Staff. Ask away, and good luck!!


Frequently Asked Questions

1. What kinds of letters do I need to apply to medical school?
For most schools, you need a MINIMUM of two letters from science professors, and 1 letter from a non-science professor. If you have done research, a letter from your PI is also recommended, especially at research-intensive schools. (If you know of any exceptions to this rule, feel free to post in this thread with citations and I will add them). Other letters that may be helpful: a letter from an employer who knows your skills well, a letter from a physician you shadowed/worked with who knows your skills well, a letter from a volunteer coordinator who knows your skills well. The key is that the letters be exceptional. A detailed letter that can give clear examples of why you are an excellent candidate for medical school will generally trump a tepid letter from a famous person. Every school is different. Please check each school's individual letter requirements by visiting their website. A copy of an XLS spreadsheet from 2010 is attached to this post. The accuracy of this spreadsheet is unknown so be sure to check individual school websites! Keep in mind that a committee letter usually overrides any specific school requirements listed on the spreadsheet.
1a. But doesn't every school have different letter requirements?
Yes, they do. Do your homework, buy an MSAR (I hear from this thread that the way to go is to buy online access because the hard copy is not as useful: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=811023), and look at the school websites. Also, AMCAS has a link to every school; use it and figure out what you need for the schools you're applying to. https://www.aamc.org/students/applyi...ating_schools/ You can get a rough idea from the attached XLS spreadsheet but check school websites to confirm.
1b. But do I really really have to get X type of letter? (2 non-science, 1 science, a letter from my PI)
The short answer: yes. The long answer: Maybe...it depends on the school. No one on SDN can answer this for you. But the general rule in medical school admissions is do what you are told. Get the two science letters. If you can't...call the schools you're applying to and see if they will make an exception. But be aware that the answer may be no.

2. I am a non-traditional student and have been out of school for awhile. Can I get around the letter requirements?

The simple answer is probably no. If you are a non-traditional student, this doesn't mean that you have an easier time getting into medical school; the same hoops still need to be jumped through. Being out of school for awhile is likely a problem in itself; schools want to see recent evidence that you can handle the coursework necessary to get through medical school. Take some classes, form relationships, and get the letters you need to. If you must, you can contact each school individually to see if they would be ok with you submitting alternate letters, but be aware that the answer may be "no".

3. My school has a medical school admissions committee, and they produce a committee letter. But the letter won't be released until really LATE! (August, September, October). Can I just skip the committee and collect my own letters?

The general wisdom on this topic is that if your school has a committee, USE IT! If you don't, you will be asked why and will need a very good reason. You are circumventing the committee at your own risk.

4. How/when can I submit letters of req to AMCAS?
Once the application opens in May, you may begin submitting letters to AMCAS. Before you can mail a letter in, you must "create' the letter in your AMCAS application. This involves you telling AMCAS who the letter writer is and naming the letter in AMCAS. AMCAS will then give this letter an ID number. It is important for you to give your letter writer both your AMCAS ID number and the Letter ID number to avoid any snafus with lost letters. Your letter writer can then mail the letter into AMCAS with these two pieces of information, and the letter will be uploaded to your file and will be available to assign to any school you wish. I am told that while AMCAS will accept documents without your AMCAS ID on them, you MUST have the Letter ID or AMCAS will not accept it. I don't have firsthand knowledge of whether or not this is true.

You can create and submit letters at any time, including after you submit your application and after you are verified. This is one of the few parts of the application you can edit after submission.

5. Do I have to know which letters are going to which school when I first submit my AMCAS application?

NO! You can submit your application without assigning letters. Again, this is one of the few parts of the application that can be altered later. HOWEVER, once you assign a letter to a school, you CANNOT un-assign it. If the letter is present in AMCAS, and you assign it to a school, it WILL go to that school. However, if you "create" the letter in AMCAS, assign it to a school, but your letter writer never sends the letter in, you can notify AMCAS (and the school, through the AMCAS application) that the letter will no longer be sent.

6. How many schools use the AMCAS Letter service?
This year, it looks like all but 5 schools that participate in AMCAS are participating in the letter service. Those non-participating schools are:
Duke University
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Medicinein Shreveport
Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans
Universidad Central Del Caribe
University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine.

The participating schools can be found here: https://www.aamc.org/students/applyi...ating_schools/

7. Is it in my best interest to have my letter writers write different letters for each school?
Probably not. AMCAS can only hold a maximum of 10 letters for you. If you need a minimum of 3 letters for each school, these slots will be used up rather quickly.


8. What are letter services such as Interfolio, and why do people use them?
Interfolio and other companies provide secure online letter holding services. You can have your letters uploaded to these services at any time so that you're not scrambling at the last minute (or during the summer!) to get letters into your application. This can be especially beneficial when you are 9 months or so out from your planned application cycle, but know the professor you have NOW will write you a great letter. You can have them write the letter, upload it to a letter service, and then many months later have the letter sent to AMCAS once the application opens. When you do this, you have the ability to add on both your AMCAS ID and the Letter ID to the letter. All your letter writer needs to do is upload the letter (or mail it in) on letterhead and with a signature. These sites are secure and they do not allow you to read the letter beforehand.

9. What else about letters do I need to know?
Your letter must be SIGNED, and should be on OFFICIAL LETTERHEAD whenever possible. This is something that holds people up every year. Some schools will even hold up your application because of this. Also, AMCAS has a beautiful FAQ dealing with letters here: https://www.aamc.org/students/applyi...ding_page.html

10. How should I ask someone for a letter of req?
On this one, I will give my own experience. For each letter writer, I prepared a packet. In the packet I had:
A list of all of my science grades (or non-science grades for a non-science prof)
A copy of my resume
A rough draft of my personal statement
A guide to writing medical school letters (which can be found by googling), a reminder that the letter needed to be signed and on letterhead.

Before handing them this (because who wants all that before they even say yes!) I asked them point blank if they "would feel comfortable writing me a strong letter of recommendation for medical school". Always do this in person!!! If they hesitate...walk away. Seriously. You don't want this person writing your letter.

When they enthusiastically said yes, I pulled the packet out of my backpack and gave it to them.

Because I used Interfolio, I did not need to provide them with my AMCAS ID or Letter ID, but instead told them that they would get an email from Interfolio that evening with instructions on how to upload the letter. Give them a FIRM deadline (2-4 weeks seems to work best) for when you need the letter. Don't ask at the last minute. Don't ask when you think a billion other people will be asking. Do offer to provide them with any other supplementary information they would like. And do give them a thank-you note (and maybe a Starbucks card) when they submit the letter.

11. OMG! My letter writer has not written my letter!!! It has been minutes/hours/days/weeks/months and I'm freaking out!! What do I do!?
First, stop by or email and gently remind them that you need the letter by X date. If this doesn't work, I have given them a premature Thank-You note with a small token, and this seems to light a fire. I recommended this method to someone on SDN last year and it apparently worked like a charm.

If this isn't working....you do the same thing you do whenever something goes awry - find a plan B. Ask someone else...two other people even, just in case this person does not come through. You can't have too many letters. But you can have too few.

12. Do I have to waive my right to see the letters?

No. But if you don't schools might not see them as letters that carry much weight. Waive your right. If you know the person well enough, you should have a pretty good idea of what they are going to write.

13. If I apply this June, and I have given every school my 5 chosen LOR's with committee letter through AMCAS virtual evals upload by my prehealth office, and then I get anther LOR over the summer/fall and want to send it to all schools in December, do I have to have the prof mail it to all 25 schools or will AMCAS distribute it?

or, tl;dr: Can I submit my application without the letters?
You can add a letter at ANY time in AMCAS, have it sent to AMCAS, and AMCAS will distribute it.
You may want to shoot an email to each school letting them know to expect another letter just in case. They should be updating your file continuously (they will want your current contact info, and often people change their addresses mid cycle) but they may not always do it in a timely manner.



Please send me a PM if you know of additional questions suitable for the FAQ.

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  • Medical School LOR Requirements.xls
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Hi friends, long-time lurker here.

Keeping it short and simple - how are letters from lecturers or post-docs viewed compared to letters from full professors?

I'm in a bit of a bind - already graduated undergrad, taking a few classes right now at my university as a graduate to finish up pre-reqs, and many of the instructors are not professors but are lecturers or post docs.
 
It's better than nothing, but really it won't hold nearly the weight of a letter from a professor.
 
Members don't see this ad :)
My non-science letter was from a lecturer, and my cycle turned out fine. For the science letters it's probably safer to get a letter from a professor.
 
I currently have all of my LOR's in interfolio ready to go.

How quickly can I send them to AMCAS?
Can i do that May 1 or do I have to wait until i submit june?
 
From the AAMC 2014 Webinar for Pre-Health Advisors:

"The AAMC convened a Letters of Evaluation Working group (LEWG) whose charge is to assist the AAMC with the creation of a centralized set of guidelines for letter writers.

The AAMC and medical schools do not expect that all letter writers will use these guidelines in the first year of their release.

The LEWG is still working on these guidelines and they are not yet complete.

When published, the guidelines will be available from www.aamc.org/amcasletters"
 
From my understanding the way that a lot of people ask for them is to request a meeting to discuss the LOR, so this is what I did.

Two of my professors just said that my personal statement and resume will be enough, indirectly avoiding a personal meeting. Is this a bad thing? Does this indicate that I'll get a lukewarm letter from the both of them? Am I just reading too much into this? :eek:
 
From my understanding the way that a lot of people ask for them is to request a meeting to discuss the LOR, so this is what I did.

Two of my professors just said that my personal statement and resume will be enough, indirectly avoiding a personal meeting. Is this a bad thing? Does this indicate that I'll get a lukewarm letter from the both of them? Am I just reading too much into this? :eek:

How well do you know them, and how well do they know you?
 
I've taken multiple classes with one of them and am currently in one of her classes. I've gone to her office hours a couple of times over the past couple of years but I don't really know if she knows me that well, but the classes I have taken with her have been small.

For the other professor, I've been a TA for one of his classes for a couple of semesters, but conversation with him has been kind of minimal and almost entirely professional.

I haven't really talked about my interest to go to medical school with either of them, so I'm kind of worried about why they don't want to talk to me about it.
 
Members don't see this ad :)
From my understanding the way that a lot of people ask for them is to request a meeting to discuss the LOR, so this is what I did.

Two of my professors just said that my personal statement and resume will be enough, indirectly avoiding a personal meeting. Is this a bad thing? Does this indicate that I'll get a lukewarm letter from the both of them? Am I just reading too much into this? :eek:

Yeah, unfortunately that confirms you will have weak letters from them.
 
yikes, that sucks, thanks guys--at least i'll know what to expect
 
Do you think this is necessary or not? Would they even care/know about the difference?
 
All they need to know is that you're applying to medical school, MD or DO doesn't matter (unless you're getting a letter from a DO for a DO school obviously).

Most LOR writers probably won't even know the difference.
 
Never mention that you are applying DO! That will get your app tossed so quick.
 
Never mention that you are applying DO! That will get your app tossed so quick.

Not sure if srs...

But..really? Why? The stats should speak for themselves, not how and where I'm using them. :confused:
 
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Do you think this is necessary or not? Would they even care/know about the difference?

All they need to know is that you're applying to medical school, MD or DO doesn't matter (unless you're getting a letter from a DO for a DO school obviously).

Most LOR writers probably won't even know the difference.

Never mention that you are applying DO! That will get your app tossed so quick.

Not sure if srs...

But..really? Why? The the stats should speak for themselves, not how and where I'm using them. :confused:

Merging with LOR thread. Please use this thread for all future LOR questions
 
Yeah, unfortunately that confirms you will have weak letters from them.

Confirms a weak letter? How so....

In a meeting you will go over why medicine, why me, what I've been doing... all of this should be in the PS and resume already... PERHAPS a weak letter, but this definitely doesn't confirm it.

Some professors have written hundreds of letters. Just because they don't think a little meeting is necessary, that doesn't mean they will be unable to submit a strong letter.
 
Professors are busy and some want to cut as many meetings as possible to reduce the # of hours they work, which is a lot a week. I gave my LOR profs basically my entire AMCAS application (PS, resume, list & description of activities) and only had a meeting with 2 LOR writers. Doesn't mean it's a weak letter. It could be a pretty strong letter if they are familiar enough with your work and personality to write a letter of recommendation for you. They could have easily have said "No, I don't know you enough, even with a PS and resume."
 
Yeah, unfortunately that confirms you will have weak letters from them.

+1

It sounds like your association with them is pretty tenuous so I can't imagine they would be able to provide enough information about you as a person or as an applicant to write a strong LOR. It also didn't sound like they know you well enough to offer to write one. Are these your only options?

If I were you I would stop by a their offices' a few times here and there and try to spark up enjoyable conversation before setting up an appointment. That way they will feel more comfortable with writing a letter and feel like you worked for it a little bit. Hope this helps.
 
Professors are busy and some want to cut as many meetings as possible to reduce the # of hours they work, which is a lot a week. I gave my LOR profs basically my entire AMCAS application (PS, resume, list & description of activities) and only had a meeting with 2 LOR writers. Doesn't mean it's a weak letter. It could be a pretty strong letter if they are familiar enough with your work and personality to write a letter of recommendation for you. They could have easily have said "No, I don't know you enough, even with a PS and resume."

Like earf said, professors are busy people and for them to avoid a meeting this probably shouldn't be misconstrued as anything more than what it is. In your case I think you should keep this in mind and make a bigger effort for them to write stronger letters for you -- what I mean is that, in addition to your resume and personal statement, you should give them bullet points or some kind of list of items which you believe are specific to your relationship with them and that would enhance the letter to be more personalized, more about you (as opposed to generic student XYZ). Don't cut corners and give them both the same bullet points because if they do end up writing letters based on your points you're going to have two identical letters which will hurt rather than help your case.

BTW, I ended up having to do this with both of my science professors and as far as interviews go, I was told that my letters were solid. So there -- that's for all of you skeptics out there trying to put OP down.
 
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Confirms a weak letter? How so....

In a meeting you will go over why medicine, why me, what I've been doing... all of this should be in the PS and resume already... PERHAPS a weak letter, but this definitely doesn't confirm it.

Some professors have written hundreds of letters. Just because they don't think a little meeting is necessary, that doesn't mean they will be unable to submit a strong letter.

Professors are busy and some want to cut as many meetings as possible to reduce the # of hours they work, which is a lot a week. I gave my LOR profs basically my entire AMCAS application (PS, resume, list & description of activities) and only had a meeting with 2 LOR writers. Doesn't mean it's a weak letter. It could be a pretty strong letter if they are familiar enough with your work and personality to write a letter of recommendation for you. They could have easily have said "No, I don't know you enough, even with a PS and resume."

Yes, it does. If the person writing your letter isn't invested enough to sit down and talk with what exactly they should be writing about and emphasizing, you are going to end up with a weak letter. It isn't a BAD letter. It is a WEAK letter. If you can't understand this point, then you don't understand the difference between a good letter and a strong letter. Unless you are having a reasonable dialog on a semi-regular basis with the person writing your letter, you should be having a sit down meeting with them or at the very least a pretty good phone call. More info on LOR:

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472


BTW, I ended up having to do this with both of my science professors and as far as interviews go, I was told that my letters were solid. So there -- that's for all of you skeptics out there trying to put OP down.

Again, nobody is saying that your letters won't be passable. They simply won't significantly help you get in. I've seen people admitted to medical school and residency based entirely on LOR. You can't compare those letters (ie strong letters) with letters that are essentially average which is what the generic "written with a packet of papers" turn into.
 
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This may or may not mean a weak LOR. However, generally (not always) the LOR writer will have a phone call with you, or a meeting, or a series of emails to get an in depth understanding of you, your endeavors and motives. This happens even if they know you very well.

So, I would be a bit cautious as to the strength of these LORs.
 
Yes, it does. If the person writing your letter isn't invested enough to sit down and talk with what exactly they should be writing about and emphasizing, you are going to end up with a weak letter. It isn't a BAD letter. It is a WEAK letter. If you can't understand this point, then you don't understand the difference between a good letter and a strong letter. Unless you are having a reasonable dialog on a semi-regular basis with the person writing your letter, you should be having a sit down meeting with them or at the very least a pretty good phone call. More info on LOR:

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472

I disagree. State universities are enrolling more and more students these days -- and competition in academia for today's professors is fierce. They are expected to research, teach classes, and a lot of the faculty at my school are absolutely expected to engage in leadership-type or growth-promoting activities for the university. These professors are absolutely short on time, and when a student comes in to ask a professor, with hundreds of other students, to write them a letter, that's an additional burden to the dozen+ letters they're already writing. Trying to demand more time from them because you're a premed who needs letters is, dare I say it, extremely entitled.

I asked my professors, in person, whether they would be comfortable, and willing, to write me strong letters of recommendation. They both agreed, though they stipulated that they didn't have the time to just set aside everything else and talk about my intent to go to medical school. This was why I was asked to make bullet points like I'd suggested to the OP. Luckily, they were also able to briefly go over the particular attributes which they believed were unique to me, so I came out feeling like I could really trust them.
 
Something else...

We made a handful of phone calls to letter writers. Only a couple in a given year, mainly clarifying things for borderline applicants. If your letter writer doesn't know who you are off the top of their head, it is a problem. I mean you don't have to stand out years from now, but if they wrote you a letter in the last couple of months, they should know who you are and be able to talk about you on your behalf. I can tell you this, for residency, if a program is interested in you, they call your letter writers almost 100% of the time in competitive specialties.

"So what would Dr. XYZ say about you if I called him?" - Department chair
*applicant answer*
"Ya, I already called him, and that is what he said." - Department chair
 
I took a three week long field course that had three professors, and I know all three of them pretty well on a personal level.
Would med schools be okay with two of my LOR's being from two of the professors of this course? Does that fact that they taught me in the same class make the letters less effective?
I'd appreciate any thoughts.
 
I took a three week long field course that had three professors, and I know all three of them pretty well on a personal level.
Would med schools be okay with two of my LOR's being from two of the professors of this course? Does that fact that they taught me in the same class make the letters less effective?
I'd appreciate any thoughts.

I think technically that this is fine. However, I would be a bit concerned with how much they would differ in their ability to describe you.
 
I asked my professors, in person, whether they would be comfortable, and willing, to write me strong letters of recommendation. They both agreed, though they stipulated that they didn't have the time to just set aside everything else and talk about my intent to go to medical school. This was why I was asked to make bullet points like I'd suggested to the OP. Luckily, they were also able to briefly go over the particular attributes which they believed were unique to me, so I came out feeling like I could really trust them.

You make it seem like letter writers always understand the difference between saying nice things about someone and a strong letter. If the extent of a letter are, "A+ level student, hard worker, nice, works well with others, intellectually curious." I would consider it a weak letter. Letter writers, particularly those who have no interaction with the application process have little idea about the potential impact of letters.

Letter writers don't need to sit down to talk about your intent or reasons for going to medical school. That is irrelevant and if they are talking about that, they are wasting their time and space in your application. YOU need to convince the admissions committee that you want to go to medical school. Your letter writers:

LOR are subjective. This fundamental characteristic is what makes them dispensible for some and vital for others. LOR can be grouped with one's ECs and PS to make up the non-hard, non-objective portion of one's application. Unlikely your ECs and PS however, LOR are an opportunity for someone else to vouch for you or more often than not a part of you. This is important because you are as a pre-med a non-known entity. Your evaluation of your contributions, skills and abilities is without benchmark. Your professors, PIs etc. are established in their fields and do not suffer from these two inadequacies. They carry a reputation as well as an implied access pool of other students to compare you to. No other part of your application replicates the information that is contained in a LOR. Thus, it becomes an important component.

http://http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472
 
I took a three week long field course that had three professors, and I know all three of them pretty well on a personal level.
Would med schools be okay with two of my LOR's being from two of the professors of this course? Does that fact that they taught me in the same class make the letters less effective?
I'd appreciate any thoughts.

If you are asking these questions, you are missing the purpose of LOR.

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472
 
I took a three week long field course that had three professors, and I know all three of them pretty well on a personal level.
Would med schools be okay with two of my LOR's being from two of the professors of this course? Does that fact that they taught me in the same class make the letters less effective?
I'd appreciate any thoughts.

I think technically that this is fine. However, I would be a bit concerned with how much they would differ in their ability to describe you.

If you are asking these questions, you are missing the purpose of LOR.

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472

Merging with LOR thread
 
From my understanding the way that a lot of people ask for them is to request a meeting to discuss the LOR, so this is what I did.

Two of my professors just said that my personal statement and resume will be enough, indirectly avoiding a personal meeting. Is this a bad thing? Does this indicate that I'll get a lukewarm letter from the both of them? Am I just reading too much into this? :eek:

How well do you know them, and how well do they know you?

I've taken multiple classes with one of them and am currently in one of her classes. I've gone to her office hours a couple of times over the past couple of years but I don't really know if she knows me that well, but the classes I have taken with her have been small.

For the other professor, I've been a TA for one of his classes for a couple of semesters, but conversation with him has been kind of minimal and almost entirely professional.

I haven't really talked about my interest to go to medical school with either of them, so I'm kind of worried about why they don't want to talk to me about it.

Sounds like a set of weak letters.

Yeah, unfortunately that confirms you will have weak letters from them.

yikes, that sucks, thanks guys--at least i'll know what to expect

Confirms a weak letter? How so....

In a meeting you will go over why medicine, why me, what I've been doing... all of this should be in the PS and resume already... PERHAPS a weak letter, but this definitely doesn't confirm it.

Some professors have written hundreds of letters. Just because they don't think a little meeting is necessary, that doesn't mean they will be unable to submit a strong letter.

Professors are busy and some want to cut as many meetings as possible to reduce the # of hours they work, which is a lot a week. I gave my LOR profs basically my entire AMCAS application (PS, resume, list & description of activities) and only had a meeting with 2 LOR writers. Doesn't mean it's a weak letter. It could be a pretty strong letter if they are familiar enough with your work and personality to write a letter of recommendation for you. They could have easily have said "No, I don't know you enough, even with a PS and resume."

+1

It sounds like your association with them is pretty tenuous so I can't imagine they would be able to provide enough information about you as a person or as an applicant to write a strong LOR. It also didn't sound like they know you well enough to offer to write one. Are these your only options?

If I were you I would stop by a their offices' a few times here and there and try to spark up enjoyable conversation before setting up an appointment. That way they will feel more comfortable with writing a letter and feel like you worked for it a little bit. Hope this helps.

Like earf said, professors are busy people and for them to avoid a meeting this probably shouldn't be misconstrued as anything more than what it is. In your case I think you should keep this in mind and make a bigger effort for them to write stronger letters for you -- what I mean is that, in addition to your resume and personal statement, you should give them bullet points or some kind of list of items which you believe are specific to your relationship with them and that would enhance the letter to be more personalized, more about you (as opposed to generic student XYZ). Don't cut corners and give them both the same bullet points because if they do end up writing letters based on your points you're going to have two identical letters which will hurt rather than help your case.

BTW, I ended up having to do this with both of my science professors and as far as interviews go, I was told that my letters were solid. So there -- that's for all of you skeptics out there trying to put OP down.

Yes, it does. If the person writing your letter isn't invested enough to sit down and talk with what exactly they should be writing about and emphasizing, you are going to end up with a weak letter. It isn't a BAD letter. It is a WEAK letter. If you can't understand this point, then you don't understand the difference between a good letter and a strong letter. Unless you are having a reasonable dialog on a semi-regular basis with the person writing your letter, you should be having a sit down meeting with them or at the very least a pretty good phone call. More info on LOR:

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472




Again, nobody is saying that your letters won't be passable. They simply won't significantly help you get in. I've seen people admitted to medical school and residency based entirely on LOR. You can't compare those letters (ie strong letters) with letters that are essentially average which is what the generic "written with a packet of papers" turn into.

This may or may not mean a weak LOR. However, generally (not always) the LOR writer will have a phone call with you, or a meeting, or a series of emails to get an in depth understanding of you, your endeavors and motives. This happens even if they know you very well.

So, I would be a bit cautious as to the strength of these LORs.

I disagree. State universities are enrolling more and more students these days -- and competition in academia for today's professors is fierce. They are expected to research, teach classes, and a lot of the faculty at my school are absolutely expected to engage in leadership-type or growth-promoting activities for the university. These professors are absolutely short on time, and when a student comes in to ask a professor, with hundreds of other students, to write them a letter, that's an additional burden to the dozen+ letters they're already writing. Trying to demand more time from them because you're a premed who needs letters is, dare I say it, extremely entitled.

I asked my professors, in person, whether they would be comfortable, and willing, to write me strong letters of recommendation. They both agreed, though they stipulated that they didn't have the time to just set aside everything else and talk about my intent to go to medical school. This was why I was asked to make bullet points like I'd suggested to the OP. Luckily, they were also able to briefly go over the particular attributes which they believed were unique to me, so I came out feeling like I could really trust them.

Something else...

We made a handful of phone calls to letter writers. Only a couple in a given year, mainly clarifying things for borderline applicants. If your letter writer doesn't know who you are off the top of their head, it is a problem. I mean you don't have to stand out years from now, but if they wrote you a letter in the last couple of months, they should know who you are and be able to talk about you on your behalf. I can tell you this, for residency, if a program is interested in you, they call your letter writers almost 100% of the time in competitive specialties.

"So what would Dr. XYZ say about you if I called him?" - Department chair
*applicant answer*
"Ya, I already called him, and that is what he said." - Department chair

You make it seem like letter writers always understand the difference between saying nice things about someone and a strong letter. If the extent of a letter are, "A+ level student, hard worker, nice, works well with others, intellectually curious." I would consider it a weak letter. Letter writers, particularly those who have no interaction with the application process have little idea about the potential impact of letters.

Letter writers don't need to sit down to talk about your intent or reasons for going to medical school. That is irrelevant and if they are talking about that, they are wasting their time and space in your application. YOU need to convince the admissions committee that you want to go to medical school. Your letter writers:



http://http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=985472

Merging
 
I am currently a grad student about 4 years out of undergrad. I'm wondering do letters from faculty that have served as my research supervisors (including my adviser) count towards the "science professor" LOR requirement? I technically haven't taken any classes with them but several collaborators/mentors that I have worked closely with know me well and would write strong letters. I have taken courses in grad school but those faculty would not know me as well.

Thanks!
 
I have been out of school for a while as well. Is having a "weak" science letter from just having an A in the class/maybe spoke to the professor a little bit over coffee for this letter to chat better than not having a science letter at all?

I know some schools require science letters. I'm kind of out of luck and no professors are responsive nor willing to write a letter. I have very strong letters from employers, nonscience prof, PI's (though from another university) etc outside of science letters but these require science may not be as strong. Will this hurt me?
 
I've heard a lot of talk about Interfolio, can someone give me a quick run-down of everything I need to know about it? Specifically how does Interfolio keep you from seeing what the rec writer wrote? Thanks!
 
My non-science letter was from a lecturer, and my cycle turned out fine. For the science letters it's probably safer to get a letter from a professor.

I was wondering about this. My teacher from my pre-cal class last semester was a PhD student and not a professor. I really connected with him and was wondering if that would count as a non-science professor.
 
I've heard a lot of talk about Interfolio, can someone give me a quick run-down of everything I need to know about it? Specifically how does Interfolio keep you from seeing what the rec writer wrote? Thanks!

You send an interfolio request to your letter writer and they submit it directly to Interfolio. Most professors will request that it is confidential and when they submit it, you are only allowed to see that they submitted the letter (Interfolio will notify you), but not the letter content itself. So when you are ready to send out your letters to AMCAS, you just pay a fee and they send the letter to them but you will not see what the letter contains. But there is also an option to have a letter submitted non-confidential, which in that case you can read it, but for application, I'm not sure if it holds as much weight. If you are uncomfortable with waiving your rights to read it, its probably a weak letter.

Interfolio helps gather all your letters into one space so you can collect letters over time and send them all at once. Very useful when you want to get letters from prof but are taking a gap year. Just make sure your subscribe to a certain amount of time, I think they do 5 years subscription and you can extend it if needed.
 
Hi Guys,

Has anyone been in a situation where their prof (all three profs actually) enthusiastically said sure I'll provide a LOR but they asked you to write the letter for them? Do you feel like adcoms can tell that the letter wasn't written by the prof themselves?
 
Hi Guys,

Has anyone been in a situation where their prof (all three profs actually) enthusiastically said sure I'll provide a LOR but they asked you to write the letter for them? Do you feel like adcoms can tell that the letter wasn't written by the prof themselves?

Adjectives is your newest friend. I would take that and run with it.
 
Is it okay if one of my recommenders signs the waiver form electronically (like just use a script font on the form) or will AMCAS not accept an electronic signature? My PI no longer is at my lab and I think he's back in Germany (his home country).
 
I know that I need two letters from two science teachers but does it matter if the two teachers are both biology? Or should I try to limit myself to one biology and try to get the letter from a physics or chemistry teacher? The thing is that I never developed any meaningful relations with a physics or chem teacher but I have great relationships with many bio teachers? What are your guys thoughts on this? Thanks

Also does it matter if one of the teachers I plan to get a recommendation from no longer teaches at my university?
 
I know that I need two letters from two science teachers but does it matter if the two teachers are both biology? Or should I try to limit myself to one biology and try to get the letter from a physics or chemistry teacher? The thing is that I never developed any meaningful relations with a physics or chem teacher but I have great relationships with many bio teachers? What are your guys thoughts on this? Thanks

Also does it matter if one of the teachers I plan to get a recommendation from no longer teaches at my university?

Unless the school specifies, any professor in the sciences will do. It doesn't matter if they're both biology, or a mixture of bio/chem/physics profs. The most important thing is that they can speak to your fit for medicine. I would, however, refrain from getting a LoR from a professor of naturopathy or homeopathy.
 
Unless the school specifies, any professor in the sciences will do. It doesn't matter if they're both biology, or a mixture of bio/chem/physics profs. The most important thing is that they can speak to your fit for medicine. I would, however, refrain from getting a LoR from a professor of naturopathy or homeopathy.

Not sure if serious.
 
I know that I need two letters from two science teachers but does it matter if the two teachers are both biology? Or should I try to limit myself to one biology and try to get the letter from a physics or chemistry teacher? The thing is that I never developed any meaningful relations with a physics or chem teacher but I have great relationships with many bio teachers? What are your guys thoughts on this? Thanks

Also does it matter if one of the teachers I plan to get a recommendation from no longer teaches at my university?

I'm assuming different bio classes right? (some classes have multiple professors; I'd refrain from getting 2 recs from the same class) Otherwise, that's fine -- plenty of people get both science recs from biological science classes. And no, it doesn't matter if the professor is no longer at your university.
 
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I know that I need two letters from two science teachers but does it matter if the two teachers are both biology? Or should I try to limit myself to one biology and try to get the letter from a physics or chemistry teacher? The thing is that I never developed any meaningful relations with a physics or chem teacher but I have great relationships with many bio teachers? What are your guys thoughts on this? Thanks

Also does it matter if one of the teachers I plan to get a recommendation from no longer teaches at my university?

Unless the school specifies, any professor in the sciences will do. It doesn't matter if they're both biology, or a mixture of bio/chem/physics profs. The most important thing is that they can speak to your fit for medicine. I would, however, refrain from getting a LoR from a professor of naturopathy or homeopathy.

Not sure if serious.


I'm assuming different bio classes right? (some classes have multiple professors; I'd refrain from getting 2 recs from the same class) Otherwise, that's fine -- plenty of people get both science recs from biological science classes. And no, it doesn't matter if the professor is no longer at your university.
Merging with LOR thread
 
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