Letters of Recommendation
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Can anyone give advice on this? Do I waive my rights to access? If I am submitting the letters with the form I am seeing them regardless... not sure which to choose?
Comments
also
http://wiselikeus.com/collegewise/2010/09/should-you-waive-your-rights-to-see-your-letters-of-rec.html
Ideally you shouldn't have access to what your referee writes about you unless he/she shows you - and educational institutions in general assume this - and so, you should play bearing this in mind.
Guys, this may be a dumb question but I am confused - do your profs only submit one LOR? And then you can choose for that letter to go to multiple schools? Or do they need to submit a LOR tailored specifically to each school ?
Yes, they can just submit one which you can send to multiple schools. They do not have to tailor one for each specific school.
But is it more favourable/beneficial to ask them to write, say 5, each tailored to the specific school? Not sure what is common practice here sigh....
No, I don't think that's necessary and certainly not common practice. Perhaps if one of your profs is an alum of one of the law schools you are applying to you could have them mention that in a specific LOR.
Otherwise, I don't see how you can really tailor a LOR to a specific school in a way that's going to be beneficial. I also think you may risk getting 5 mediocre letters were you to ask and find a prof willing to do so.
I agree with Alex (as usual). LORs don't necessarily help that much, BUT they can definitely hurt your app. Having a bunch of mediocre LORs is risky.
(Source: http://blog.spiveyconsulting.com/the-curious-reality-of-letters-of-recommendation/)
waive your rights. it is theist preferred thing to do because it shows that the person writing the LOR is a credible person.
how would it look to a law school if you didn't waive your rights to a LOR because maybe you wanted to check it to make sure it was good to send? that's what they will most likely think and if you were focused on double checking the LOR then they will think that you might not fully trust your LOR writer enough to have you blindly send the letter. as long as you have someone write it that you somewhat trust won't screw you over, you should be fine.
tldr... just waive your rights ?