I asked my university professor if he could give me a recommendation letter for law school and he told me to prepare a draft and send it to him and he will sign it. I do not know what to put in, is there any guidelines or sample that I can use? It would be great if you could give me some tips and ideas about what to put in since he gave me a blank check.
Comments
otherwise, to study law, including qualities of mind and character, dedication, responsibility, and readiness for the rigors of advanced academic study. Evidence of overcoming adversity, rising to challenges, and achieving beyond expectations are helpful in assessing candidates for admission. You may wish to include how well you know the candidate and in what capacity,
your assessment of the relative strength of the candidate within the reference group in which she or he is being compared, and how the candidate will add to the diversity of the law school.
This is from the lsac. I wouldnt draft the letter. I would tell him, or email him what qualifies you as a law school candidate. Once he gets the email from lsac he will know what to do.
But yeah, it's going to be less than ideal, and might be pretty clear to the AdComms that you wrote the letter yourself.
Depending on your relationship with this professor, you might try (very nicely) to tell them that you are not comfortable writing your own letter, but you would be happy to provide a lot of details about what you'd like to go in it. That might make them more amenable to writing it (basically you provide the content, they provide the "voice").
If not, the second best option would be to contact someone else for a LOR.
The third would be to try Pacifico's suggestion and have somebody other than yourself do the actual writing, based on facts you provide them. At least it won't sound like yourself. I think this is less desirable than finding a faculty member who's willing and able to give you a good letter they actually wrote, so I'd try the first two options first.
As for content, the LSAC requirements posted above are a good start. Make sure the recommender states how they know you and for how long and only comments on those qualities they had directly observed. Anecdotes are always better than unsupported statements, so think about things you've done that would show the qualities the schools are looking for. For example instead of saying "Nader has excellent analysis skills", talk about a paper you wrote that maybe was above what would be expected for the class and give examples of analytical insight from the paper. Proceed similarly for the other qualities (writing ability, work ethic, determination, sheer intelligence, intellectual curiosity, engagement and so on). Obviously not every recommender will be able to comment on all of the above, so pick and choose the ones you can most strongly support with anecdotes. Perhaps once you provide this info your professor will be more willing to draft the letter.
Thanks guys for your helpful comments, I am glad i did not go anywhere else for advice
If at all possible, see if you could email the professor a list of traits and accomplishments that you displayed around him, just to job his memory. Ask if he would be willing to write the letter if you provide that list.
@Pacifico and @runiggyrun I forget about the "reluctant" professor, hopefully I will manage to find another professor