- Joined
- Apr 15, 2006
- Messages
- 152
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Medical Student
So this isn't exactly new-thread-worthy question material, but I wanted to get some advice from the people on this forum.
I was just wondering what is your stance on getting recommendation letters from science professors? Should they be able to come from a lower level science professor, such as organic chemistry, or do you think they would probably have more weight in an upper level course where you just recently had that professor? Does the difference in division level matter, since really organic is considered one of the harder classes that you take in college?
I'm asking this because I have a tiny decision-dilemma. I am going to be moving onto organic II next semester and was wondering if I wanted to take the same professor I had in organic I or change to another professor. The one professor I had is despised by all and has hard tests, but the other one is easier and teaches well apparently. Plus the better professor also has a period that fits my schedule btter.
The difficulty in deciding between the two of them comes from thinking that the orgo. professor I did have might be good to have as a recommendation letter and I could possibly learn more from him as I'm used to his teaching style now. At the beginning of his class I struggled a lot, but then ended up with a B+ (not the grade I'd like, but much better than a C/D possibility from doing badly the first test). I emailed him and thanked him for teaching me a valuable lesson about hard work and effort and he responded with a very nice email.
He actually knows who I am and my name/face, which I find to be impressive. Especially, since he has around 300 students. So do you think I should stay with him because of these qualities? or do you think I should go with the potentially better professor, because a recommendation letter from an organic professor, who wouldn't be writing it until a year later, would be a good choice?
Thanks for the help and I'm really sorry about the long post that seems to just ramble.
I was just wondering what is your stance on getting recommendation letters from science professors? Should they be able to come from a lower level science professor, such as organic chemistry, or do you think they would probably have more weight in an upper level course where you just recently had that professor? Does the difference in division level matter, since really organic is considered one of the harder classes that you take in college?
I'm asking this because I have a tiny decision-dilemma. I am going to be moving onto organic II next semester and was wondering if I wanted to take the same professor I had in organic I or change to another professor. The one professor I had is despised by all and has hard tests, but the other one is easier and teaches well apparently. Plus the better professor also has a period that fits my schedule btter.
The difficulty in deciding between the two of them comes from thinking that the orgo. professor I did have might be good to have as a recommendation letter and I could possibly learn more from him as I'm used to his teaching style now. At the beginning of his class I struggled a lot, but then ended up with a B+ (not the grade I'd like, but much better than a C/D possibility from doing badly the first test). I emailed him and thanked him for teaching me a valuable lesson about hard work and effort and he responded with a very nice email.
He actually knows who I am and my name/face, which I find to be impressive. Especially, since he has around 300 students. So do you think I should stay with him because of these qualities? or do you think I should go with the potentially better professor, because a recommendation letter from an organic professor, who wouldn't be writing it until a year later, would be a good choice?
Thanks for the help and I'm really sorry about the long post that seems to just ramble.