|
A letter of recommendation
is an act of persuasion. It is your attempt to persuade the letter's
recipients that this particular individual is the best choice for
the program or position.
By its very name, a letter
of recommendation should present
a positive picture of the person who is being recommended. So it
is important that you agree to write such a letter only for someone
about whom you can make positive statements. (One of the most difficult
things to do is to inform a student or colleague that you can not
write a very positive letter for him/her, but it is important to
do so at the outset so that he/she can ask someone else to write
the letter.) A letter that "damns with faint praise" is
of no use to anyone.
As with most writing
tasks, writing a letter of recommendation is made easier if you
do some prewriting activities first. In this case, the prewriting
involves requesting the applicant's current resume and a complete
description of the program or position that he/she is seeking. With
this information in hand, put yourself in the place of the people
who will receive the letter. What information would help them make
an informed judgment about this applicant? What traits and skills
would be needed for this position? Does the applicant have them?
In short, the more information you have, the more persuasive your
letter will be.
Content
and Structure of the Letter
The overall goal of the
letter should be to present a positive and realistic picture of
the applicant, giving the letter's readers a sense that you know
this person well and that you believe the applicant has the traits,
the training, the background, and/or the potential to perform well
in the program or position. Avoid, however, presenting the applicant
as unrealistically wonderful. A letter that "damns with exaggerated
praise" is of no use to anyone.
As with most writing
tasks, a letter of recommendation should be crafted to fit the situation
and the audience. A letter that successfully recommends an applicant
for a spot in graduate school might not be effective as a recommendation
for a job in company. One of the benefits of putting yourself in
the position of the letter's readers is that you can imagine what
will and what will not be persuasive to them.
Begin the letter by explaining
your relationship with the applicant. Under what circumstances have
you known him/her? For how long have you known him/her? Are you
evaluating him/her on the basis of performance in a classroom? In
a lab? As a TA or an RA? As a colleague? Then discuss the applicant's
traits or skills that are appropriate to this particular program
or position.
As with most writing,
specific details and examples are compelling for two reasons: first,
they demonstrate the depth of your familiarity with the applicant;
second, they create additional insight into the applicant.
Usually, a letter of
recommendation should have three or four paragraphs and should not
exceed one page in length.
The
Letter and You
Part of the letter's
persuasive power comes from the image of you created by that letter
(your ethos). If you are unknown to the letter's recipients, it
might be a good idea to mention your own credentials where appropriate
(e.g., "In my twenty years of teaching at MIT, I have rarely
had a student who ..."). Standard academic prose and unambiguous
language will add to the image of you as a professional who is an
able communicator.
|