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Recommendation
Overview
by
ResumeEdge.com
- The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
I. Letter
of Recommendation for Job-Searching
Letters of recommendation are convenient substitutes for work references:
they neatly sum up a previous or current employer's perspective
and allow prospective employers to avoid the sometimes awkward and
vague conversations that result from interrogating references over
the phone about your strengths and weaknesses. In addition, such
letters help prospective employers to skirt the difficulties of
reaching a reference. Finally, they are also a great advantage for
the job-seeker, because they offer concrete, credible, and readily
available evidence of past accomplishments and abilities.
If you have been laid off but left the company on good terms, a
letter of recommendation will provide prospective employers with
a credible, thorough account of why you had to leave the company
-- for instance, if the layoff was part of a general downsizing
II.
Letters of Recommendation for Applications
Most undergraduate and graduate school applications
require two or three letters of recommendation. Depending on whether
you are applying to an academic program or professional degree--
for instance, business or law school -- these letters should come
from former or current professors, employers, or supervisors who
are familiar with your work and performance.
For academic applications, letters from teachers or professors are
generally preferable to letters from employers. Admissions officers
are looking to supplement their knowledge of your academic performance
and aptitude -- gleaned from your transcript and standardized scores
-- with concrete evidence that you are a dedicated and enthusiastic
learner. Remember: most schools nowadays recognize the value of
a dynamic, diverse student body and are thus eager to fill their
spots with candidates who have been actively engaged in both academic
and extracurricular activities. These letters should reflect not
only your participation and performance in the classroom, but also
your initiative (for instance, through research projects undertaken
with the professor, through leadership in group activities, and
through active contribution to classroom discussions).
If you are applying to a PhD program, make sure that at least two
out of the three recommendations come from people within your field
(or from a field that is closely related to the one you are about
to enter. for instance, you might have a letter from a political
scientist for an application to a PhD in Sociology, but you better
have a real good reason to include a letter from your Medieval Poetry
professor if you are hoping to enroll in a doctoral degree in Biochemistry).
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