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3, 5 and 9 if i had to pick three
3, 5 and 9 if I had to pick three
Same here.
Don't use a letter from a class you got a B in.
I call BS. If you have a professor you got along well with and is willing to go to bat for you, something as marginal as getting a B in their class is a foolish reason not to ask them.
If it's an MD school, on the other hand? Yeah, you should probably play the numbers game (which is unfortunate). 🙄
I call BS. If you have a professor you got along well with and is willing to go to bat for you, something as marginal as getting a B in their class is a foolish reason not to ask them.
Case in point: my best recommendation came from a professor I researched with and took three courses with. My best grade in any of the courses was a B+. A DO Adcom is more likely to look at the context of the recommendation, and, if they right you a strong one, their opinion of you is going to matter more than the grade.
If it's an MD school, on the other hand? Yeah, you should probably play the numbers game (which is unfortunate). 🙄
A fair point for DO admissions. You read your LORs?
+1 and if possible get a committee letter before sending any of these letters in, it will help a lot in the long run. However, if this isn't an option then do as much as possible to keep these letters confidential from you. I know it's a crazy game we play, but confidential letters aka ones you haven't read (as far as ADCOMs can tell) carry more weight than those that you submit yourself. This might require giving them stamped letters for all of the programs you're looking at secondaries from if you don't have a committee or advisor to compile these for you.You can cherry pick a little bit: have them all send one in. Then send a copy of each one to your advisor who can pick the strongest ones out for you, keeping your waived status intact.
+1 and if possible get a committee letter before sending any of these letters in, it will help a lot in the long run. However, if this isn't an option then do as much as possible to keep these letters confidential from you. I know it's a crazy game we play, but confidential letters aka ones you haven't read (as far as ADCOMs can tell) carry more weight than those that you submit yourself. This might require giving them stamped letters for all of the programs you're looking at secondaries from if you don't have a committee or advisor to compile these for you.
+1 and if possible get a committee letter before sending any of these letters in, it will help a lot in the long run. However, if this isn't an option then do as much as possible to keep these letters confidential from you. I know it's a crazy game we play, but confidential letters aka ones you haven't read (as far as ADCOMs can tell) carry more weight than those that you submit yourself. This might require giving them stamped letters for all of the programs you're looking at secondaries from if you don't have a committee or advisor to compile these for you.