Great Recommendation Letters Win Big Scholarship Bucks

Education Article Directory, Get Free Reprint Articles and Education Content for your site with
article directory
54866 *recent articles in 509 categories Last article added 11/15/07
 
Article Categories
 
Reviews
 
Site Menu
 
Site Search


 
ArticlePros.com » Education » College » Great Recommendation Letters Win Big Scholarship Bucks

  • Date: 2007-07-31
  • Author: Dale Clifton, The Scholarship Doctor
  • All articles by this author
  • Visit author's website
  • Great Recommendation Letters Win Big Scholarship Bucks


    Related College Articles

         Your scholarship application is due in ten days. It must
    have three recommendation letters attached, and, so far,
    you have not gotten any back from your teachers. A note to
    each of them last week hasn’t gotten any results. Talk
    about strained nerves. All the work to get the application
    ready, and now letters are halting the process.


    This is a scenario that repeats itself hundreds and
    thousands of times each year. You can avoid this problem
    by taking important appropriate actions. Start by asking
    for your recommendation letters at least six weeks in
    advance. This allows busy teachers to take their time in
    writing great responses. After two weeks remind them with
    a note in their mailboxes. Seven days after that make a
    visit to their classroom. Remind them in person that your
    application could be late and disqualified and that you
    will come by in a few days to pick it up. Thank him or
    her again and then stop by once more.


    One way to avoid total mayhem is to ask for more letters
    than is really needed (awards may vary in the number of
    letters neededIf the requirement is two for an award, ask
    four people.


    If you are applying for more than a couple of scholarship
    awards (and you really should be), ask if the teacher or
    whoever would be willing to put their comments on a CD.
    Remind them that you will be sending out dozens of
    applications. It will save them time. Then, you will
    bring the letters by for their signatures. They can
    inspect the documents before you send them in. A
    hand-written signature is always best.


    Who should you ask? Does it make a difference? Yes, it does
    matter. Know this: English and foreign language teachers
    generally write the best letters. They personalize them
    and may write from a half to a whole page. They also
    produce results that have no spelling or grammatical
    errors. Again, and this is a general statement, coaches
    and physical education teachers write the shortest remarks
    and may have many mistakes in spelling and grammar. But,
    go with your best options regardless of teaching position.


    Use your high school letterhead, when possible.


    Remember to ask your teacher if they can write a positive
    response. If not, move on. A probable scholarship
    winner fulfilled all requirements with a big plus and was
    in line to receive an $8,000 award. Everything was super
    except for one recommendation letter. She assumed her coach
    would write a glowing response. He didn’t. Don’t let that
    happen to you. She didn't win.


    Follow the same time-line for all requests, and remember
    this: everything in life is a decision, make the right ones
    today for your college scholarship success.

    More articles from this pro: http://www.ArticlePros.com/author.php?Dale Clifton, The Scholarship Doctor


    More on Education and College can be found here.
     

    Get this article to go

    RSS | JScript | Email | HTML

     

    About the author

    ©2007 The Scholarship Doctor, Dale Clifton. All Rights
    Reserved. Dale is an educational consultant and expert at
    helping families win college scholarships. To learn more
    about winning awards, visit http://ScholarshipDoctor.com
    or Email Dale@ScholarshipDoctor.com

    http://www.scholarshipdoctor.com

     
    Email options
       

    ** Check all that apply **

     

    This article has been accessed 305 times since 2007-07-31.


    Home  •  Search  •  Add Your Own Article  •  RSS feeds  •  JavaScript Feeds  •   •  Set as Homepage  •  Add to Favourites
    Disclaimer: The information presented and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors
    and do not necessarily represent the views of ArticlePros.com and/or its partners.
    Copyright ArticlePros.com © 2005. All Rights Reserved