Some of my professors want to talk to me about potential things to put in the letter, whereas others just said "yes" to being able to write a strong letter and asked me to send a CV.
Is it appropriate to give them a list of things that they may want to talk about, just in case they don't remember (such as "held office hours the day before the exam since the TA was sick", "got highest exam score on 2 of the 3 exams," etc.)?
In addition, I have heard that it is good for all of your letters to flag certain things, such as your motivation for being a doctor, so I can ask some profs to put this in. I have talked about it with all of them, but I can tell that one (one of my science professors) is very strict and feels that he is only an "expert" on my scientific abilities, and was wondering if it would be right for him to write about my medical motivation. Is it helpful, considering that your professors don't actually know your medical motivation, and that would be better for your personal statement to show?
Is it appropriate to give them a list of things that they may want to talk about, just in case they don't remember (such as "held office hours the day before the exam since the TA was sick", "got highest exam score on 2 of the 3 exams," etc.)?
In addition, I have heard that it is good for all of your letters to flag certain things, such as your motivation for being a doctor, so I can ask some profs to put this in. I have talked about it with all of them, but I can tell that one (one of my science professors) is very strict and feels that he is only an "expert" on my scientific abilities, and was wondering if it would be right for him to write about my medical motivation. Is it helpful, considering that your professors don't actually know your medical motivation, and that would be better for your personal statement to show?