Monday, November 30, 2009

Asking for a recommendation letter

It’s application time, both for grad school and acadmic jobs. Belatedly, I offer some advice on faculty recommendation letters for current and aspiring grad students.

Strong letters usually come from long and close relationships with faculty. We take these letters seriously, since we often write these letters to our colleagues at the same pool of schools and employers. Our reputations are at stake. So students should request a letter with equal seriousness and care.

Good letters also take time to write, especially those for graduate school and (most of all) for the academic job market. Approach your professors as early as possible—at least a month in advance. Faculty are extremely busy, and last-minute requests might get last-minute effort.

I think I’m similar to other faculty in that I generally write recommendation letters for students who:

  • took at least one course with me and excelled;
  • wrote a strong senior essay, thesis, or dissertation with me;
  • worked for me for at least four months; or
  • had some other close, personal interaction relevant to your application.

If none of these apply, it’s difficult to write a strong letter. Letters are usually explicit about how long we’ve known you, in what capacity, and how we rank you relative to your peers and our past students.

How can you find out if someone will write a strong letter for you? One way is to ask. Personally, I am frank with students, so as not to do them a disservice.

Once a professor has agreed to recommend you, three or four weeks before the due date you should email the following:

  • your latest CV;
  • your transcripts, GPAs, and (if relevant) GRE scores;
  • a list of where are the letters will be going; and
  • depending on where the letter is going, some supplementary information:

Grad school, scholarship, or academic job market applications: share your statement of purpose, research proposal, or other personal statements. Letter-writers take these seriously, and often discuss the specific strengths and weaknesses of the proposal in their letter. So try to ensure you letter writer sees a fairly polished version before the letter is written. This means you probably want to start discussing the proposal with your advisors at least six to eight weeks before the letters are due.

Job or fellowship applications: include a description of the job or fellowship, and what they are looking for in a letter. Often a job or scholarship application will offer specific guidelines. If they don’t, provide a quick description to your letter writers.

Try to send everything in one package, well organized. We letter writers are absent minded, and will lose the multiple pieces if you do not collate them for us.

For grad school applications, you want at least one to two academic letters. Two is probably better, with one from an employer if you have been out of school for long. So maintain contact with your advisors after you leave university.

If your application requires three letters, you might be tempted to send four. This is usually a bad idea: every additional letter after your best one lowers the average quality of your application. This is simple arithmetic. A fourth letter only makes sense if it will be glowing and adds a completely different perspective.

Finally, remember that (as academic applications go) letters from senior faculty usually carry more weight. Junior faculty who are poorly known outside their subfield (i.e. people like me) carry less. Strong letters matter most, though, and you may be able to build closer relationships with junior faculty less inundated with students. Keep this trade-off in mind. Probably a balance of junior and senior faculty recommenders is best.

from here

Sunday, October 11, 2009

When do I start applying?

Before I answer the title's question, I think I should mention what you should do for application.
1. Take a TOEFL and GRE exam. (you should have scores before mid Dec.)
2. Prepare you resume and SOP. (You should have in hand in first week of Dec.)
3. Get enough! recommendation. (You should have in hand two weeks before application deadline)
4. Mail them on-time and accurately. (post one week before deadline)
5. request your exam scores to be sent by ETS. (request them when you send your files)
6. Wait. (Enjoy from Life)

General comment for each step:

1. I prefer the paper TOEFL. I think it has the same credibility as IBT. To do that you should check every week the ETS site to book for empty seats. But that is not enough, because you should check that every day. To do that apply in groups. Find at least 7 people, not necessary in the same field, but at least 2 of them apply for economics. Each day one member of group check the web for new empty seats. This is great exercise because you should do the same when you apply for VISA appointment. I will talk about it later. Also If you miss the PBT in you country consider the other countries. For example Iranian should consider Turkey.
TOEFL is very important. Generally you should get the minimum requirement. For some school it is really strict to pass the requirements for some not. But if you could not pass the requirement and you think you have good chance for that school, try for it and do not worry. The "Quantitative part" is very very very important in GRE. It is not easy. You should get 800. Solve many sample exams before the test. Sometimes you need to know the meaning of some worlds. If you fail this part, it is really hard to come up with the solution.
2. This link is funny but really helpful. The grad advisor prepares it for Job Market students and not you. But it shows that the resume should be really to the point and brief. Do not include any irrelevant statements. If it has no connection or nothing to do with the economy why do you mention them. Imputing then in your resume show that you are not a professional application. I like to prepare the in latex, if you know how to use Latex try these resumes. Also if you are gonna to write you resume in world, see them, they will give you some ideas.
3. It is very important, believe me. Talk with professors very seriously. Ask them how many recommendations they can write for you. Set some day to get them. Ask from your old friends to know who is responsible for recommendation. Responsible in the sense to write accurate, fluent and relevant recommendation. Do not try the advisor who miss the deadline for your important school. Request from whom who are more in contact with you during the school. Ask them to write what. If you think your professor is a nice guy, request to write a sample to make the life easier for him/her. Consider to mention the following points. "I know him during this class or project. He is hard work, self research and responsible student. He is good programmer because write many codes for me. Good researcher because follow the project with high incentive and individually up to get some results. He present his results professionally. Outstanding among students. His English is fluent. I thought macro from Stokey-Lucas and he show his good math background in that class ...". Be honest. Explain what you are.
4. Plan to mail on-time. Although if departments receive your documents one week later they will be fine, but this one week is for some accidental happenings and error terms. You do your job on-time, they will happen out of you hand. Check with graduate advisor that they have received the files completely. If sending the files in groups reduce the cost do that. You can also send them for your friends in the same city and they hand out them to departments. But pay the application fee some days advanced. If you miss the deadline for application fee, it is hard to have another chance. Before start the application think about the credit card seriously. I mean before starting anything make sure you have reliable credit card. I will write more about it.
5. Easy but do that on-time. Ask the ETS to give you the information of postal date and code. You can share them with department if they deny reception.
6. Wait and check here for news and rumors. Reply to departments in time. If you want more time for decision, inform them why do you have such a request and inform them one week in advance. Bring reasonable reason.

Good Luck


Monday, April 27, 2009

Does it make sense..

Does it make sense we write in our SOP that we want to come back to our country, we want to think about growth, we want to think about political economy of oil and so on?
1. I prefer to do not write this kind of domestic economic interest, I personally prefer to think more globally and think more about frontier but
2. These kinds of reasons are not at all harassing, I mean professors here understand them but if you write them in informal fashion, no one buy them. You could propose your idea in professional manner and not talk like an socialists. Be economics in your SOP.
3. Univs read SOP if they hesitate to give you fund/admission or not, thus I strongly recommend to write some thing be related to professors in the your target univ. For example
Talk about political economy, Natural curse if you apply in LSE
Talk about Inequality, Dynamic Macro, Auction in Oil and Gas industry if you apply for UT
Talk about Electricity and LNG, auction, regulation if you apply stanford
Talk about growth, public policy and .. if apply MIT
....


Does it make sense if we mention our perfect job in engineering?
Do not insist on them, they only show that you are a serious student, but do not forget you apply for economics. The same causality work when you ask from engineering prof. to write recommendation for you. But Math is completely different. Focus on your skill if you have some specific research or TA ... in mathematics.

Does it make sense to request from my manager to write recom for me?
depends on what he wants to write for you. If your work is not related to economics this recommendation destroy your situation. But if you have done some economic research in your job it could be interesting.

Does it make sense I send a research proposal or abstract of thesis?
absolutely. It could help you so much.

continue..