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Anyone do this during 3rd year? What in the world do you write? I was told I could write my own LOR by my preceptor but am clueless as to the format, style, key words etc etc.
Anyone do this during 3rd year?
What in the world do you write? .
I was told I could write my own LOR by my preceptor but am clueless as to the format, style, key words etc etc.
Well I am coming from a ****ty school in the middle of nowhere and my options for LOR from preceptors who have written plenty of them is a non-option. Hell, nearly every preceptor I have had has had zero medical students in the past. So a real answer as to what goes into them would be appreciated.
Also, Bala565 you really should watch your tone on here, you tend to talk down to people more than almost any other poster on here. Of course I am aware that quality is more important than quantity. Seriously, contribute something meaninful in a non-derogatory fashion or feel free to continue your demeaning posts in another thread.
Well I am coming from a ****ty school in the middle of nowhere and my options for LOR from preceptors who have written plenty of them is a non-option. Hell, nearly every preceptor I have had has had zero medical students in the past. So a real answer as to what goes into them would be appreciated.
Also, Bala565 you really should watch your tone on here, you tend to talk down to people more than almost any other poster on here. Of course I am aware that quality is more important than quantity. Seriously, contribute something meaninful in a non-derogatory fashion or feel free to continue your demeaning posts in another thread.
It's not unusual for students to encounter attending physicians who ask you to write your own letter of recommendation. After you write the letter, the faculty member may simply sign it or modify it before signing it. If you are presented with such an offer, you should certainly consider it but accept the offer only after thinking about the following:
1. If you are like most students, you probably haven't been asked to write a letter of recommendation before. Having the ability to write a strong letter of recommendation is not an innate quality - it is one that is learned through practice. There is a chance that your inexperience may result in the development of a weak letter. See Dr. Cuts previous reply.
2. A letter that you write may end up being similar to your personal statement or other parts of your application. If so, it may not add much to your application. In contrast, letter writers who use their own words offer multiple perspectives on your performance, achievements, and overall strengths.
3. By asking you to write the letter, the faculty member has made it clear to you that he is not that enthusiastic about you and your residency application. Ask yourself what this individual might say if a residency program calls to ask questions about you (which is not unheard of). In addition, if he hasn't written the letter, then how well will he be able to talk about its contents?
If you decide to write your own letter, I agree with some of the other posters, who encourage that it be proofread by others. Remember to back up any praise that you include about yourself with specific examples. These are the details that convince a reader that the praise is actually true. For example, it's not enough to say that "I was impressed with his problem-solving skills". You need to back it up with a real life example. That's the type of letter that gets an applicant noticed.
Good luck,
Samir Desai, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Baylor College of Medicine
I'll never forget the day I learned, hands down, the very most valuable lesson of life. I was 27 and my dad asked me to clean my room. But instead I rustled up stray neighborhood dogs, trashed the back yard playing in the muddy swamp I created with the sprinkler system, after which the animals and I simply devastated the house interior, shattering a new and expensive plasma television. After that, my pops never again asked me to clean my room. The moral is, if you do a job bad enough people won't ask you to do it again. So my advice to you: ask a different professor that won't make you write your own letter.
I'll never forget the day I learned, hands down, the very most valuable lesson of life. I was 27 and my dad asked me to clean my room. But instead I rustled up stray neighborhood dogs, trashed the back yard playing in the muddy swamp I created with the sprinkler system, after which the animals and I simply devastated the house interior, shattering a new and expensive plasma television. After that, my pops never again asked me to clean my room. The moral is, if you do a job bad enough people won't ask you to do it again. So my advice to you: ask a different professor that won't make you write your own letter.
Anyone do this during 3rd year? What in the world do you write? I was told I could write my own LOR by my preceptor but am clueless as to the format, style, key words etc etc.