Letters of Recommendation
Guide to Writing Letters of Recommendation for Law School (12)
Office of Career Services and Off-Campus Learning
Harvard University
Successful Letters of Recommendation
Andy Cornblatt
Georgetown University Law Center
Guide to Writing Letters of Recommendation for Law School
Introduction
Writing letters of recommendation is hard work. It demands time that may otherwise be spent on
teaching and research. But it can be a rewarding activity which greatly affects the lives of students by
helping them gain opportunities for the study of law.
Most of us have been beneficiaries of letters of recommendation and we should look forward to repaying
the favor by helping someone else, particularly since letters of recommendation are now quite important.
The opportunities of today are sought by a much larger group of intelligent and well-educated
applicants, most of whom seem to have excellent grades and test scores. The real choice among
qualified applicants, therefore, is now often made on the basis of the content of a carefully written letter
of recommendation.
If you have any doubts about the student's qualifications for the opportunity sought, or negative
impressions which you would understandably want to include in any letter, you should discuss these
reservations with the student. Not only will the student gain valuable knowledge about himself or herself
in this process, but an opportunity is provided for the student to clear up your reservations. In one recent
case a professor's strongly negative opinion turned out to be based on a confusion of student identities.
When a student understands your reservations, you can decide together whether or not you should write
a letter. It may be that some other teacher has experienced a relationship with the student in which the
student's more positive qualities were exhibited.
In a certain sense writing letters of recommendation is a form of teaching, providing an occasion when
we can review with a student his or her own strengths and weaknesses.
Letters of recommendation do three things: I) provide facts about the applicant 2) render a judgment as
to the applicant's ability and 3) make the applicant come alive, stand out against other applicants so that
he or she will be remembered in the decision process.
Getting Ready to Write
Having agreed to write a letter, you first need to assemble information about the student and the
opportunity for which application is being made. Here the student might help by providing:
-information about what is being applied for; a copy of the student's completed application form with a
copy of any essay that he or she may have written;
-a copy of the his/her transcript; a copy of his/her resume;
-the deadlines by which the letter must be mailed.
The student might also write out a brief reminder recalling the courses, tutorials, or extracurricular
activities in which you worked together, and the subjects of particularly important discussions, including
copies of any papers on which you made extensive comments.
It might be a good idea, after deciding what information should be transmitted, to consider with the
student how to divide up the labor: who should write what. Selection committees can tire of reading the
same anecdote in several different letters, wondering if that is all there is to tell about the student.
Extracurricular activities are often subject to this repetition.
The Strategy of the Letter
Good letters of recommendation must take into account the character and concerns of the subjects, the
writer and the reader.
What will the reader want to know? Together with the student you might jot down the criteria you think
are going to be important in the selection process and decide what views of the student you have that
might speak to these issues.
Applicants for law school will be judged on their ability to do academic work, their intellectual capacity
and motivation, their ability to communicate. General character, social skills, and extracurricular
activities will be of secondary importance, though law school admissions committees do sometimes
solicit information on applicants' special talents or unusual abilities. These committees sometimes ask
you to provide any insight you may have on a candidate's ability to handle the ethical problems of the
legal profession; in fact; they sometimes ask that you evaluate the candidate as a potential lawyer.
In the best of all possible worlds, law school admissions committees would like to read that an applicant
ranks in the top one percentile of students the recommender has taught during an extensive teaching
career, or some similar stellar comparison with the applicant's peers. Of course such praise, and such a
vantage point, is rare, but if you have some perspective and can compare the candidate favorably with
his or her contemporaries, admissions committees will welcome that judgment.
You should feel free to respond to law schools on any or all of these issues - if you can- but you should
not feel bound by such suggestions. A general rule of thumb is to be concrete, provide illustrations,
answer in honesty, but do not attempt to comment on areas about which you cannot. If you can praise
the candidate's skills, but cannot connect such abilities to lawyering, for instance, simply comment on
what you know well.
Goals of the Letter
Convey Facts:
In general it is important that the letter of recommendation convey information rather than judgments
alone, facts rather than adjectives alone. This is not easy. Most of us do not recall the individual
experiences which led to certain attitudes about our friends and associates. But to write an effective
letter of recommendation, we need to try to record the facts which formed the basis for our judgments.
A writer should be wary of using unsupported adjectives, such as:
reliable efficient thorough sensitive enthusiastic bright
imaginative creative responsible mature thoughtful
What is the evidence on which these adjectives were based? Better to state, for instance, "his
imaginative reach is illustrated by his choice of topics for papers in my course on modern European
history (titles)," than to simply call him "imaginative".
Make Judgments:
You are making judgments, both explicit and implicit, as you accumulate facts and apply adjectives.
Judgments in your areas of expertise and from your clearly stated vantage point are welcomed by
admissions committees.
If you choose to compare a candidate with his or her peers, that clearly is also a judgment- and as
emphasized above, such judgments require specific supporting data.
An estimate that Jones is "one of my best students in ten years" leaves open to question best in what?
promise? performance? personality? course grades? breadth? depth? subtlety? energy? Do not leave the
reader in doubt about your meaning.
Make the Candidate Come Alive:
It is important to make the subject of our letters take an identity. After reading files on dozens of
students a committee member will be able to remember only a few by name or by some distinguishing
characteristic. Be sure your candidate is one of those who can be kept in mind.
We generally remember persons, particularly on first acquaintance, by details extraneous to their central
character: "the fellow with the red beard and dashiki" "the woman in the red jumpsuit who comes from
Walla Walla, Washington". It helps to provide them with just such a hook on which they can store the
information and judgments provided. They are not likely to remember an applicant who was "creative,
industrious, intelligent", but they will remember the student whose hobby was keeping tarantulas.
Clarify the Identity of the Writer:
In weighing the information and judgments provided in the letter of recommendation, readers need to
know who the author is. The letterhead and the title under the writer's signature will give some clue, but
more is generally required.
This is particularly so if your ability to make judgments about the candidate depends on some previous
experience of your own not related to your present job.
The relevant information about yourself can be worked in at various points in the letter. For example: "I
knew George best in my capacity as a member of the Board of Directors of the neighborhood law office
where George worked the summer of 1975." Or, "In the ten years I have taught creative writing I have
seen only two or three students whose poetry has..."
Not only should the writer identify himself or herself, but the nature of the relationship with the
applicant should be precisely described as well. Reveal any biases. Candor is certain to strengthen the
letter and is also ethically required. A statement that your judgment may be biased in favor of the
student because you are friends will testify to the student's friendliness as well as lend credence to your
letter.
Define “Local” Terms and Edit Carefully:
Beware of words and phrases that have only local meanings; each college has its own mysterious jargon,
which law school admissions committees should not have to work to translate.
Courses should not be described by title alone, but rather, explained in terms of content, degree of
discussion, and paper-writing requirements.
Some writers find it a good idea to have their letters of recommendation edited by someone else,
particularly when the writer knows a student well and might overlook certain obvious but important
characteristics or fail to sense how the student appears to a reader who must build an impression solely
on the basis of the letter. One way of finding oversights is to ask someone who does not know the
student to read your letter and describe back the person who is the subject of the letter and see whether
an adequate job has been done or whether some important point has been overlooked.
Closing Remarks
A Note on Format:
There is no right length for a letter. What is important is that the letter be readable so that the
information in it will be transmitted to the reader. There is no right style for a letter, either. Do not be
afraid of a punchy style or even humor if it is not flip. If "ordinary prose" is your choice, by all means
use that.
After You Write:
Do not forget to keep a copy of every letter of recommendation you write. Not only may you reasonably
be asked about students for whom you have written, but if you should be asked to write again, the labor
of a second letter is minimal with a copy of your first at hand.
If the college or residential unit provides a permanent file of recommendation letters for students, you
might suggest to the student that he or she give you an envelope addressed to that repository, so that an
extra copy of your letter can be stored there, as well.
Successful Letters of Recommendation
The most misunderstood and underutilized part of a law school application is the letter of
recommendation. Most people, applicants and professors alike, assume that since all of the letters say
nice things, their value must be minimal. The assumption is just plain wrong. While it is true that 98% of
the letters are positive, the important thing is how positive the particular letter is. Also, letters of
recommendation can contain some very important information for Admissions Committees and, if
written properly, can greatly affect an applicant's chances for acceptance.
It is important at this stage to draw the distinction between the two types of letters to which I will be
referring. First, there is the “Dean’s Letter.” This is prepared by the pre-law advisor or designated
official at a college or university. Second, there is the basic recommendation filled out by a professor.
Dean’s Letter
When you know the applicant, these letters can be very, very helpful. Unlike most professors, you as a
pre-law advisor have the advantage of an overview of the pool of law school applicants from your
school. How the particular applicant ranks within that group (i.e., I would place her in the top 2% of this
year's group and top 8% in the last ten years) is extremely valuable to us.
Please don't feel as though we would rather you not go out on a limb. That couldn't be further from the
truth. Most recommendations while good, don't say very much because they are just too guarded and
safe. If you feel someone is terrific, say so. If you feel someone is a risk, say so. The honest, open
recommendations are the ones we pay attention to and that will pay off for you when you have an
applicant about whom you feel strongly and whose numbers may not indicate acceptance.
Your evaluations are important, of course. Unfortunately, the other vital component of these letters - the
informational component - is often overlooked. Applicants all believe that their particular major is the
most difficult, or that they are the most involved person on campus. Your view on the applicant's course
of study or extra-curricular involvement can be critical in our evaluation. In addition, we would weigh
very heavily your comments on applicants as regards their hours working while in school, any serious
problems (physical or emotional) which have had an impact on the GPA or any history of doing poorly
on standardized tests. Your view of what the applicant asserts as facts are more important than you
realize.
Finally, it is helpful to us to have your comments on the applicant's background, especially if there is
evidence of disadvantage. I realize that commenting on ethnic status or physical handicap may be
delicate, but we need this information from you because the applicant may mistakenly believe he or she
should not mention it.
Professor's Letter
A great deal of what was mentioned above certainly pertains to a professor's letter of recommendation.
What is different here is that the professor can provide the admissions committee with a direct academic
analysis which the Dean or pre-law advisor cannot. Comments on writing ability, research skills, and
oral presentation are valuable to us.
But what is more valuable is the overall academic evaluation, here, comparisons with other students,
especially other law school applicants present and past, is highly valued. Again, let me emphasize the
high premium admissions committees put on honesty and willingness to go out on a limb. "I recommend
Jane with enthusiasm" tells us nothing. But, "in my twenty years here, I would place Jane in the top 3%"
shines like a neon sign.
The informational component is important in these letters also. Very often, the professor has the
perspective from which to comment on the applicant's curriculum. In addition, professors often know
the student well enough to comment on other aspects besides classroom performance. These comments
are welcome.
This brings us to the last point. Who should the applicant approach to write letters? First, although the
law school may only request one letter (as we do at Georgetown), most schools expect to receive two or
three from the applicant. That is fine. However, more than three letters approaches the point of
diminishing returns. The axiom, "the thicker the file, the thicker the student" is not always true, but there
is some truth in it. Every aunt or uncle telling us what a fine person his or her nephew or niece is
couldn't matter less.
Secondly, in choosing professors, it is always better to ask the ones who know the applicant well rather
than someone in the applicant's major, for example. As mentioned earlier, three recommendations are
usually the norm. I would recommend one or two academic recommendations and one from an
employer. Applicants shouldn't agonize over which people to choose. If there is any indecision, send
them both. It probably will not hurt, and it could help.
Use of Recommendation Forms
Often law schools will send a form questionnaire to be filled out, on which students are to be rated or
specific questions answered. If you feel comfortable with the form and have time to address its
idiosyncrasies, by all means fill it out. Such forms are generally used by selection committees to suggest
their ideal kind of response - but they certainly will take less, and will make good use of less. If you do
not use the form, but write a letter instead, you may want to write on it "see attached letter"; you can
sign the otherwise blank form and staple your letter to it.
Individually Addressed or "To Whom it May Concern"
Optimally, each law school that receives its recommendation in the form of a letter would like to receive
a tailor-made letter addressed directly to it. It is not necessary, however, or even reasonable in cases of
multiple applications for you to address letters this way. If the purpose of the letter, and hence the
content, can be expected to be the same from school to school, you may write just one letter, and head it
"To Whom it May Concern" or "Letter of Recommendation Written in Support of Application to Law
School" or some similar heading. Such a letter can be photocopied and the copies individually signed.
RECOMMENDATION LETTERS – University of Chicago
RICHARD BADGER, ASSISTANT DEAN
Each year we read between 8,000 and 10,000 recommendation letters in conjunction with the
applications submitted to Chicago. Admittedly, this task is less onerous than writing those
recommendations. Unlike a number of other law schools, Chicago puts considerable weight on
recommendation letters and we find that helpful letters and the evaluative interviews which we conduct
often provide the best guidance in making the final decisions among a group of applicants who appear to
be equally promising on the basis of other information. I am occasionally asked what distinguishes the
helpful letters from the unhelpful ones. I have pulled together below some thoughts on that question
with the hope that they may assist people writing on behalf of applicants to Chicago. While I cannot
state that I speak for other law schools, I do have some reason to believe that my views are generally
shared by other institutions and certainly by other members of our Admissions Committee.
I read each recommendation with three questions in mind: 1) How well does the writer know the
applicant and the applicant's academic record? 2) What does the writer have to say about the applicant's
abilities and characteristics which are important for success in law school and the profession? 3) In the
final analysis, how enthusiastic is the writer's support for the candidate's admission to this particular law
school? The answers to these questions are obviously interrelated but for the purposes of this
memorandum it may be helpful to deal with them individually.
Most letters of recommendation will partially describe how well the writer knows the applicant. They
usually contain brief descriptions of the size and number of courses in which the writer has worked with
the student. Often absent, however, is a description of the kinds of formats in which the writer has seen
the student perform. For example, did the student write a short answer examination at the end of the
course or were there a number of papers to complete? Did the writer see the student respond in class on
a regular basis? How much informal contact was there with the student outside of class? I will generally
assume that the larger the class and the larger the institution, the less familiar a reference will be with the
applicant. This assumption is frequently incorrect but I will not realize it unless that is made clear.
Writers will often say, "Mary's academic record speaks for itself." This, unfortunately, is not true unless
I am familiar with the particular academic program. In short, all applicants with 3.8 grade point averages
are not judged as being equal. Some students will have taken more challenging courses than others.
Some faculty are more demanding than others. Our Admissions Committee may not be aware of which
courses are graduate level courses or which are part of an honors program. All applicants to Chicago are
asked to supply academic references with copies of their full transcript so that those who write may
comment, to the extent they can, on the quality of the overall academic record.
There may be little to distinguish between the abilities and characteristics which law schools look for in
comparison with those characteristics which other graduate academic programs seek. Legal education
and the legal profession, however, do emphasize some skills over others and the following comments
may help writers who are not familiar with these distinctions.
Language is the lawyer's working tool and the best law students are those who have the ability to write
and speak with precision, fluency and economy. Not only must the student be able to communicate his
or her own thoughts clearly, but he or she must have the ability to read and listen carefully with an eye
and ear for fine points and subtle distinctions
Legal education demands well developed analytical skills and the ability to juggle multiple variables.
Legal reasoning at one time or another involves deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning and reasoning
by analogy. The best students can think independently, have the ability to cut through to the essentials
and can distinguish the relevant from the extraneous. Contrary to what many believe about the law, there
are few clear and distinct legal rules. A tolerance for this ambiguity and the ability to recognize
exceptions and qualifications which may modify general rules are characteristics of successful law
students. In short, a reference should consider whether an applicant is likely to be stimulated or
frustrated by questions where there are no "correct" answers.
The nature of legal education -- large classes, competitive pressure, and substantial amounts of material
to be mastered -- may make some personality traits more important in law school than in other academic
programs. Students will often learn as much from their classmates as from the faculty. Thus, interaction
among students is an important feature of legal education and those who enjoy engaging in discussion in
and outside of class are more likely to flourish in this atmosphere. The student who is intellectually alive
and curious is more likely to sustain academic progress where there is little reinforcement between
examinations. A student must be diligent and well organized to handle large quantities of material. A
well-developed sense of humor and a mature attitude are particularly helpful in adjusting to the
pressures which many students will experience in law school.
Perhaps the most difficult task in reading a recommendation is interpreting the significance of such
statements as "excellent" "outstanding," "highest recommendation," and "recommended without
qualification." Such terms may indicate meaningful distinctions among applicants supported by the same
writer but we may not be familiar with the way in which a particular reference ranks applicants. This
uncertainty can be compounded where we receive a standard letter which is submitted to a number of
different law schools. Is the degree of support directed to the most selective or the least selective of the
schools to which the applicant has applied? Occasionally we will know the faculty member writing a
recommendation. In those situations it is generally easier to evaluate the degree of enthusiasm for a
particular applicant. It is far more often the case, however, that our most significant contact with an
institution will be familiarity with its graduates who have attended the Law School in recent years. Thus,
a comparison of an applicant with other graduates we know from the same institution may provide us
with a more accurate assessment of the applicant's potential for success at Chicago than the objective
factors of the Law School Admission Test score and the undergraduate grade point average. In weighing
the overall assessment made by a reference it is also helpful to know how confident the writer is of his
or her own judgment about a particular applicant.
As we are occasionally reminded by those who submit recommendations, the task of ultimately selecting
the most promising students for this law school is ours and not theirs. Helpful letters, however, can make
this task easier.