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chicamedica said:If i have a chair letter, do i still need a letter from another anesthesia attending from my rotation? I have 2 other letters from IM attendings from my research work.
Zeffer said:This is program dependant. Some programs require 2 letters from anesthesia and one from elsewhere. If you are able to get a good letter out of your current anesthesia attending you should. That way you base is covered. Some people I applied with sent four letters to every program, 2 Anesthesia, and 2 from elsewhere and let those programs pick the letters they wanted to use. Hope this was helpful.
chicamedica said:Yes actually very helpful. My original plan was to do this, but the way my anes rotation works is, every day I work with someone different. There are 2 possible attendings I can ask for a letter.
One is my advisor, with whom i've only worked on one occasion during the past 2 weeks and once about 1.5 years ago during MS3 (which he didn't remember). But he will be getting the evals from all the people I worked with over the past 2 weeks (I think).
The other attending I haven't worked with at all yet since he's at another site, but I will be at that site the next 2 weeks, and I will be working one-on-one with him tomorrow (Saturday) the whole day. He offered to write an LOR for whoever volunteered to work with him this Saturday, and he'd prob write a nice letter, but prob is, since he loves students so much, a lot of ppl ask him for letters. And since he doesnt' know me that well, I'm concerned that it'll just be one of his extremely nice, gushing "form" letters. Also, it just feels more that he'll be writing this letter in exchange for my coming in, since he promised this in advance. This makes me think that this letter might not be as strong as it would be from someone who writes one because they are really impressed with me.
Any advice?
Zeffer said:I would hit up your advisor. Even though you have not worked with him much he should be familiar with everything about your professional and public life. This info should give your advisor enough info to write a great letter about you. In all honesty I never spent a minute in the O.R. with my advisor, but he knew me very well, received feedback from the anesthesia docs I did work with, and saw the results of my research. He felt very comfortable writing me a killer letter because he knew me (and not in the biblical sense).
However if you do not feel your advisor would write you a great letter and time gets desperate then take the other letter.
Also you should schedule occasional meetings with an advisor to discuss the programs you are applying to and interviewed at, hone your interview skills if you feel they need it, and just chew the fat.
This is the time the rubber really hits the road for your advisor. If you feel they are not cutting it for you then find someone else, but do it soon.