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If you want my 2 cents, I'd find someone else. You won't be able to sign the confidentiality statement and that will trigger a negative response by anyone reviewing your app. Also, what does that say about the person recommending you? Clearly they are either too lazy or don't know you well enough. You'd be better off finding someone who can and is willing to write a letter for you.
Thanks for the input but I think he doesn't really care if I sign the confidentiality statement so that won't be a problem. He also does know me very well. He even helped me with my personal statement. Do you think he wants me to write it just so he'll have an idea about what I want him to say in the letter and he'll be able to elaborate more on that??? 😕

Hey guys
I asked one of my teachers for a LOR but he keeps insisting that i should write the first draft and send it to him. Has this happened to any of you? Because I'm having a really hard time writing it. All ideas would be really appreciated!!
And non-confidential L.O.R.'s are given less weight by adcoms than a confidential one.
If you send through virtual evals and you retained your right to view the letter, the adcoms will never know. But of course there is the ethical issue.
Personally, I don't think the applicant is doing anything wrong -- it is the LOR writer who is acting unethically, but others may see it differently (I asked this question to a premed advisor as a hypothetical, and she acted as if I was satan incarnate for suggesting such a thing.) It is the LOR writer that is signing their name to the letter and accompanying form, and if they don't really believe what is written/what is signed, then they are being dishonest/unethical by signing their name. If they do believe everything that is written, then what's the harm/what does it matter who physically puts the words on the paper?
Explain yourself -- Why is it unethical to write a LOR for yourself if someone else asks you to write it (and then THEY sign their name to it -- or alter it to their liking before signing their name?)Whatever helps you sleep at night man...
Explain yourself -- Why is it unethical to write a LOR for yourself if someone else asks you to write it (and then THEY sign their name to it -- or alter it to their liking before signing their name?)
Explain yourself -- Why is it unethical to write a LOR for yourself if someone else asks you to write it (and then THEY sign their name to it -- or alter it to their liking before signing their name?)
P.S. I didn't lose any sleep over this when it happened, and I got into the program that I was applying to.
Don't worry, he can't explain himself. This is mundane premed ranting about ethics. Not only is it ethical, it is very common in academia. Whenever my students ask me for a LOR, I always make them write a draft.
The spirit of a confidential LOR is that the LOR writer can feel free to write his/her true thoughts without having to deal with the consequences (i.e. having the subject of the LOR find out.) Everybody has different feelings in this regard.Explain myself? You know, you aren't really Scarface. But anyway, if you want to get technical be my guest, but what do you really think the spirit of a confidential letter is? I'm not saying I'm going to turn anybody in or anything (especially considering I wouldn't know who or to whom), so don't get your panties in a bunch.
Don't worry, he can't explain himself. This is mundane premed ranting about ethics. Not only is it ethical, it is very common in academia. Whenever my students ask me for a LOR, I always make them write a draft.
Ah, a post from someone with authority. 👍
Don't worry, he can't explain himself. This is mundane premed ranting about ethics. Not only is it ethical, it is very common in academia. Whenever my students ask me for a LOR, I always make them write a draft.
If you send through virtual evals and you retained your right to view the letter, the adcoms will never know. But of course there is the ethical issue.
Some authority? What's a PhD doing on SDN anyways? Or is it a Masters student who couldn't get into med school 2 years ago...