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The Writing of Recommendations for Turing Scholars . Alan Kaylor Cline Department of Computer Science The University of Texas at Austin February 9, 2013. The Writing of Recommendations for Turing Scholars and Dean’s Scholars and universities and many other academic programs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Writing of Recommendations for Turing Scholars
Alan Kaylor ClineDepartment of Computer ScienceThe University of Texas at Austin
February 9, 2013
The Writing of Recommendations for Turing Scholars
and Dean’s Scholars and universities and many other academic programs
Alan Kaylor ClineDepartment of Computer ScienceThe University of Texas at Austin
February 9, 2013
Letter Writing is topical
http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2013/jan/28/application-university-job-reference
This is not adversarial
This is not adversarial
• We are on the same team
This is not adversarial
• We are on the same team
• We all want what is best for the applicant
This is not adversarial
• We are on the same team
• We all want what is best for the applicant
• At TS we are subject to some constraints
Honesty
Honesty
• That includes The Whole Truth
Honesty
• That includes The Whole Truth
• Threats to honesty
Honesty
• That includes The Whole Truth
• Threats to honesty
– privacy
Honesty
• That includes The Whole Truth
• Threats to honesty
– privacy
– liability
We try to norm using:
• Current and past student UT records • Records of others from their HS• Records of others recommended by the same
person• …
We try to norm using:
• Current and past student UT records • Records of others from their HS• Records of others recommended by the same
person• …We try to norm the schools and the letter writers.
We try to norm using:
• Current and past student UT records • Records of others from their HS• Records of others recommended by the same person• …We try to norm the schools and the letter writers.
Thus, in the long run exaggerating the qualities of an applicant may hurt other applicants later on.
Negative Letter?
Negative Letter?
• The effect of a letter admitting that an applicant was marginal will likely result in the rejection of the applicant.
Negative Letter?
• The effect of a letter admitting that an applicant was marginal will likely result in the rejection of the applicant.
However• By far most applicants are rejected anyway
Negative Letter?
• The effect of a letter admitting that an applicant was marginal will likely result in the rejection of the applicant.
However• By far most applicants are rejected anyway
and
For subsequent letters, your word will be golden.
Can we – Should we – read between the lines?
Can we – Should we – read between the lines?
Paul Grice: we expect people to answer questions with the strongest true and relevant statement.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Grice
Can we – Should we – read between the lines?
Paul Grice: we expect people to answer questions with the strongest true and relevant statement. • “North Carolina State has lost their last two
games”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Grice
Can we – Should we – read between the lines?
Paul Grice: we expect people to answer questions with the strongest true and relevant statement. • “North Carolina State has lost their last two games” • “John submits his assignments in a timely fashion.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Grice
I like to see them rank the student as strongly as they can (e.g., top x% this year, top 3 in my career), and I like to see specifics: about skills and strengths. The rankings and comparisons are even more helpful if they can say a few words about what other students in the same equivalence class have done (e.g., "as good as students who have gone to Stanford and Princeton"). I would really like to see comparisons against specific named students, but I realize that for most schools, such comparisons are not very useful. If they're writing multiple letters, it'd be good to get rankings or equivalence classes among them, as well, but we never see this unless we specifically ask.
Calvin Lin – TS Program Director
More specifically…• Rank compare to peers and all students in past (with number of
years)
• Address ability to learn on their own
• Address particularly talent in math, science, and CS
• Do they do things on their own?– programming projects?– do they extend the given projects?
• Are they the person of whom others ask questions?
Mike Scott – TS Admissions Committee