Years ago, writing a letter of recommendation for a
student applying to graduate school or for a fellowship required the student to
call or mail a request to the prospective recommender, wait for a response, and
then, if the prospective recommender agreed, the student would send a hard copy
of the recommendation form along with a stamped and addressed envelope to the
recommender through the postal service. Now, it's very rare for requests not to
be made by email and recommendations not to be submitted through some online
system, which alerts both the recommender and the recommended when the letter
has been received.
No waiting for a form to arrive in the mail. No worry
about whether the recommender actually sent the letter. No steps to the post
office or mail box.
Yet, the process of requesting recommendation letters
still seems fraught. As the days click down to the recommendation due date, it
grows even more so.
It's fair to say that writing recommendations has become
a significant part of many teachers' jobs. If the teacher truly believes he or
she might not be the appropriate person to write one, he or she should let the
student know. (I once had a student ask me to write a recommendation who
decided not to write his final project because he figured he had good enough
grades going into the final to get a C in the course. I reminded him and said
he might want to reconsider who he asked.)
It's also fair for teachers to expect that students will
give them plenty of time to write recommendations and not ask them on a
Thursday morning to meet a 5 p.m. deadline the next day.
But a student's question that has been making its way
around social media is how appropriate it is to remind a faculty member that
today is the day all recommendation letters are due and that the online system
shows the letter has yet to be uploaded.
When a teacher agrees to write a letter of recommendation
by a specific deadline, the right thing is for him or her to do it. If there's
a reason it would present a hardship to write the letter by the due date, he or
she should decline the request from the get go.
But it's perfectly reasonable and appropriate for any
student to remind recommenders that letters are due soon if they haven't been
filed yet. Sometimes life gets in the way of keeping track. Sometimes teachers
are a tad disorganized.
The best approach would be not to worry and wait too
long, but to remind the recommender while there is still time to write a
thoughtful letter.
"Thank you again for agreeing to write a letter on
my behalf to Faber College," is not a bad way to begin. "The letter
is due today by 5 p.m." If it's early enough in the day, perhaps add,
"If I can provide you with any more information, please let me know."
There's nothing wrong with reminding someone, even a
teacher, about an upcoming obligation. Even if you weren't hoping for a
positive recommendation, the right thing is to do it as graciously and
respectfully as possible.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net.
Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin
(c) 2019 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.
1 comment:
How is this a moral or ethical dilemma?
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