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Tips Beasiswa

Reference Letter for Law School
By IvieLeagueAdmission.com
In all aspects of your law school application, your goal
is to convince the admissions committee that you have
the intelligence, drive and stamina to succeed in their
highly competitive program. The stakes are high; of all
the talented candidates in the applicant pool, they must
give YOU a seat in the class.
Yet a legal career requires strengths and abilities that
are not easily measured by grades and test scores, which
is where third-party reference letters come into play. A
great letter supplements the data you've provided about
your academic and professional history with independent
corroboration of your performance and potential.
Yet a compelling letter also provides a separate
function that many candidates fail to consider; it
provides critical information about your personality,
ethics and integrtiy that aren't captured anywhere
elsewhere in the application. Reference letters from
credible third-party sources who can objectively
evaluate your character are paramount in the evaluation
process. They often play a key role in whether you are
offered a seat in the class.
Candidates don't place much emphasis on their letters
of reference for two reasons:
1) they don't think they can control their contents
2) they don't know what specific steps they should take
to improve their references
From our experience, most candidates do not do nearly
enough to deliver top-notch recommendations in support
of their application. Sadly, most letters we see are
short, vague and non-persuasive. In highly competitive
situations, they do little to convince us that the
candidate is special enough to earn our support. By not
taking the initiaitve with their references, far too
many applicants miss a golden opportunity to sell their
strengths. The professsional implications can be
devastating.
Obtaining great letters of reference requires advance
planning and hard work, but is well worth the
investment. Savvy candidates give this step of the
application process the same level of attention as the
personal statement.
Who Should Write Your Reference Letters
Law schools expect to see letters from the following
people:
1) Your undergraduate committee or adviser
2) A professor from your major field of study
3) Your major professor, if you are a graduate student
4) Your supervisor, if you are currently employed
Schools differ in the number of letters they require and
accept, with most requiring at least three and accepting
no more than five. Carefully read all information the
law schools provide on their applications. They expect
you to follow the rules exactly.
A substantive letter of reference has three important
features:
a) The author knows the required intellectual ability
and professional effectiveness necessary to succeed in
law school
b) The author knows the specific candidate well enough
to evaluate his/her relevant qualifications
c) The writer provides not only his overall assessment
of the applicant, but enough supporting detail to
support his conclusion
Avoid sending letters from teaching assistants, friends,
school alumni, relatives, clergymen or politicians,
UNLESS they personally supervised your professional work
and can comment on the specific attributes being
evaluated in the law school admissions process . You'd
be surprised how many people fall into this trap, not
realizing that it actually hurts their chances. Nearly
every year, I read a letter written by a Senator,
Governor or famous Hollywood star in support of a
candidate they barely know. I'm not impressed. Law
school is serious law, not a popularity contest. We're
not starstruck enough to give a seat to someone just
because her aunt works for the Governor.
Many applicants are surprised that letters from teaching
assistants carry little or no weight. The rationale is
that they are simply not reputable or knowledgeable
sources. We are looking for an honest appraisal of your
character from someone with extensive experience in the
field. In academia, this includes the tenured faculty.
What The Committee Expects to See
Here's what the committee hopes to learn from your
reference letters:
a) The validity of your claims of academic excellence,
professional success and impeccable personal values
b) Your specific qualifications, including the depth of
your academic and professional experiences
c) Your unique traits that aren't covered anywhere else
in the application
d) Whether you can accurately evaluate others and their
perceptions of you
e) Your demonstrated commitment to pursuing a legal
career
Before you ask anyone to write a letter for you, look at
the evaluation form the school has asked them to
complete. Note that only a few categories involve your
GPA or academic performance. In many ways, your
reference writers are being asked to describe your
character, personality and temperment as valued by law
school admissions committees. Most of these attributes
have little to do with your perceived mastery of any
specific subject matter; they are intrinsic character
traits that govern your behavior in all aspects of your
life. Don't dismiss them as irrelevant.
Many applicants believe that as long as they have good
grades, they'll get a great recommendation. This simply
isn't the case. You'd be stunned to realize the number
of professors who have told us horror stories about 4.0
candidates who lie, cheat and steal. We've heard about
applicants selling drugs on campus and hiring ringers to
take their exams. Some achieved their sterling academic
record at the expense of everything else in their life.
Don't make the mistake of thinking that your professors
only see your grades. They've been in this law a long
time and have seen thousands of students come and go.
They know the fine characters from the bad apples and
they don't hesitate to tell us who is who. Pick your
references carefully and be sure that they are willing
to confirm that you are a person of integrity.
How to Ask for a Reference Letter
a) Timing. Arrange for your reference letters no later
than September in your senior year of college (for those
who have already graduated, at least a few months before
you submit your application). Ideally, ask in the
middle, rather than the end, of a semester. At
semester's end, most professors will be deluged with
requests for letters and yours will simply be another in
the pack. Increase your odds for a more thorough,
personalized reference by requesting it before the big
rush.
b) Approach. Never simply call or send a form to your
writers: always arrange for a personal meeting, if
possible, or make a phone call to discuss your request
(if the writer is not geographically close). Explain
your interest in medicine, your desire to attend law
school and your need for a comprehensive letter of
reference. Discuss any issues or concerns the person has
about your candidacy.
Verify orally that he is willing to write a "strong
letter of support", and not just an average or lukewarm
one. If you sense any hesitation, graciously withdraw
the request. You are better off asking someone else who
can recommend you without reservation. If the person
agrees to write a letter, give him the following pieces
of information:
i) A cover letter with the names, addresses and
deadlines for all letters you need
ii) A summary of your professional experience and how
you are a good match for law school
iii) A current copy of your resume
iv) Your personal statement
v) Details of the stories or anecdotes you'd like the
writer to mention
vi) Pre-addressed, stamped envelopes for all letters
c) Copy of the letter. Without exception, you should
waive the right to see all references letters that are
written about you. Admissions committees place little
stock in letters that the applicant insists on seeing,
as we know that the author is less forthcoming than if
the reference was confidential.
d) Format. Letters from your professors should generally
be professionally typed and printed on the school's
stationary. Other letters you request may not
automatically come in this form. If at all possilbe, ask
your writers to send the letters typed on professional
letterhead with a laser-jet or inkjet printer.
e) Follow-up. Two weeks after a writer agrees to to send
the reference letter, verify that it reached its
destination. If it hasn't, ask him to send a second
copy. Send a thank-you note to each person who wrote a
letter on your behalf.
f) Writing Your Own. Increasingly (over the past several
years), we've heard stories of candidates whose harried
bosses were overwhelmed by the request to write a letter
of recommendation. The applicants were instead
instructed to write the letter themselves and simply
submit it to the "author" for a signature. Most
applicants consider this a dream come true. After all,
what could be better than a chance to "toot your own
horn" under the guise of being your own boss or major
professor?
Sadly, most candidates haven't a clue what an excellent
reference letter looks like. To assume the perspective
and tone of someone in your recommender's position
requires experience and perspicacity. Most letters
written by the actual candidates are embarrassingly easy
to spot: they are timid, stilted and one-dimensional.
They include far too many details that a real reference
letter wouldn't mention and they frequently are
identical in tone to the candidate's own writing. We
nearly automatically discount candidates who do this and
make a mental note of the individual who supposedly
wrote the reference. In a few cases, we've contacted
them and they confirmed our suspicions.
We strongly discourage you from trying this approach.
Remember, the admissions committee has viewed thousands
of letters and has an excellent feel for authenticity.
We want ethical candidates who offer a balanced, honest
appraisal of their credentials. Rather than writing the
letter yourself, ask someone else who will take the time
to write a reference that genuinely reflects your
suitability for the program.
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