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Career Services staff encourage students and alumni to keep letters of recommendation current. A letter that is older than three years is unlikely to reflect the candidate's current strength and abilities.
To establish a reference file: Print and submit the following to the Career Services Office:
When requesting to send your file, please allow two (2) weeks in advance of deadlines.
It is your responsibility to Contact the Reference Office in 270 Capen, 645-2232 x 112, to inquire whether reference materials and reference forms have been received well in advance of application due dates and prior to submitting Reference Requests for graduate/professional school or employment.
NOTE: Reference files may be destroyed after three (3) years of inactivity. Please contact this office in writing every year if you have not used your file and want it to remain active.
It is very important to have strong letters of recommendation attesting to your academic achievement and potential. Ideally, letters should come from faculty members, not teaching assistants. While your supervisors can attest to your work ethic and conduct, admissions committees for graduate and professional schools (composed of faculty members) generally look to other faculty to assess your academic potential. When you ask for letters of recommendation, go in person to see your teachers; do not email or leave notes or phone messages. Your professors may want to meet with you to discuss your career goals and review your previous work. While you cannot suggest what they write about you, you can suggest topics they might cover. Academic integrity and initiative, spoken and written language skills, analytical ability, and resourcefulness are examples of topics about which you might ask your professors to write. By asking them if they feel they could write you a strong letter of recommendation, you leave them an "out" to say no if perhaps they feel they don't know you well enough. A mediocre letter of recommendation will not help your application. Generally, you will need 3-5 letters.
Don't make the mistake of waiting until just before your applications are due to start asking for references. It may take your reference writers days or weeks to write your letters. Also, start cultivating your references early by letting them know your intent, participating in class, going to office hours, doing extra credit work or other things that might get you noticed and help you establish a relationship with your teachers.
We suggest that you open a Reference File with Career Services. You can then ask your professors to write one letter of recommendation and forward it to our office. We will open a file for you to store your academic (as well as your work related) letters for future use. We will mail them for a fee, at your request, to graduate schools or potential employers. This saves your references from having to recreate letters for multiple applications.