Gofer work in exchange for Letter of RecommendationHaving trouble getting recommendation letter for...

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Gofer work in exchange for Letter of Recommendation


Having trouble getting recommendation letter for mastersElectronic recommendation letter tipsNonacademic Letter of Recommendation for MastersAsking for recommendation letter from manager for graduate schoolRecommendation Letter Request: No responseIs it ethical to require student work in exchange for letter of recommendationLetter of recommendation for relative who has done relevant work for meSame recommendation letter for different semesters?Do you write “letter of recommendation” on recommendation letter?






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14















I want to apply for master’s programs, but I need two letters of recommendation. I was never very close with any of my professors, though I did receive good grades in all of my classes.
The professor who probably knows me the best is one of the core faculty at the college. I asked her for advice on how to start with undergraduate research, which wasn’t a requirement, just an interest of mine. I also received an A in her class, and suggested an outing for the class which she then took up.
It’s also been about a year since I graduated.
Would it be appropriate to ask her if she could write a letter of recommendation, perhaps in exchange for some gofer work (filing, watching class while students take tests, running errands)?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 11





    In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

    – Quora Feans
    2 days ago








  • 6





    Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

    – B. Goddard
    2 days ago











  • Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

    – user111955
    yesterday






  • 4





    What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

    – J...
    18 hours ago













  • FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

    – computercarguy
    10 hours ago


















14















I want to apply for master’s programs, but I need two letters of recommendation. I was never very close with any of my professors, though I did receive good grades in all of my classes.
The professor who probably knows me the best is one of the core faculty at the college. I asked her for advice on how to start with undergraduate research, which wasn’t a requirement, just an interest of mine. I also received an A in her class, and suggested an outing for the class which she then took up.
It’s also been about a year since I graduated.
Would it be appropriate to ask her if she could write a letter of recommendation, perhaps in exchange for some gofer work (filing, watching class while students take tests, running errands)?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • 11





    In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

    – Quora Feans
    2 days ago








  • 6





    Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

    – B. Goddard
    2 days ago











  • Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

    – user111955
    yesterday






  • 4





    What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

    – J...
    18 hours ago













  • FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

    – computercarguy
    10 hours ago














14












14








14








I want to apply for master’s programs, but I need two letters of recommendation. I was never very close with any of my professors, though I did receive good grades in all of my classes.
The professor who probably knows me the best is one of the core faculty at the college. I asked her for advice on how to start with undergraduate research, which wasn’t a requirement, just an interest of mine. I also received an A in her class, and suggested an outing for the class which she then took up.
It’s also been about a year since I graduated.
Would it be appropriate to ask her if she could write a letter of recommendation, perhaps in exchange for some gofer work (filing, watching class while students take tests, running errands)?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I want to apply for master’s programs, but I need two letters of recommendation. I was never very close with any of my professors, though I did receive good grades in all of my classes.
The professor who probably knows me the best is one of the core faculty at the college. I asked her for advice on how to start with undergraduate research, which wasn’t a requirement, just an interest of mine. I also received an A in her class, and suggested an outing for the class which she then took up.
It’s also been about a year since I graduated.
Would it be appropriate to ask her if she could write a letter of recommendation, perhaps in exchange for some gofer work (filing, watching class while students take tests, running errands)?







recommendation-letter






share|improve this question









New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Community

1




1






New contributor



user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked Aug 16 at 18:21









user352848user352848

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user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




user352848 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • 11





    In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

    – Quora Feans
    2 days ago








  • 6





    Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

    – B. Goddard
    2 days ago











  • Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

    – user111955
    yesterday






  • 4





    What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

    – J...
    18 hours ago













  • FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

    – computercarguy
    10 hours ago














  • 11





    In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

    – Quora Feans
    2 days ago








  • 6





    Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

    – B. Goddard
    2 days ago











  • Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

    – user111955
    yesterday






  • 4





    What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

    – J...
    18 hours ago













  • FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

    – computercarguy
    10 hours ago








11




11





In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

– Quora Feans
2 days ago







In exchange for running errands? Are you suggesting you professor would write a letter of recommendation for running errands? Why not offer her $10 at least?

– Quora Feans
2 days ago






6




6





Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

– B. Goddard
2 days ago





Some profs have a rec letter policy and put it online. Mine says that you have to give me a copy of your resume, (in whatever shape it's in) and supply me with stamped envelopes and/or directions for submitting electronically. You might check and see if your prof has a published policy.

– B. Goddard
2 days ago













Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

– user111955
yesterday





Wasn't there an answer by Solar Mike?

– user111955
yesterday




4




4





What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

– J...
18 hours ago







What you are proposing is called a bribe, and it is the type of thing that will get you and your career taken to the woodshed. Don't do it.

– J...
18 hours ago















FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

– computercarguy
10 hours ago





FYI, I up voted @QuoraFeans comment under the assumption it was sarcastic.

– computercarguy
10 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















85














It’s appropriate to ask for a letter, but completely inappropriate to offer a thing of value in exchange. Professors are already paid to do their job, which includes writing letters of recommendation, and it would be unethical for a professor to accept a favor or other thing of value in exchange for agreeing to do what is already a part of their job.






share|improve this answer

































    37














    Just ask for the letter. Writing recommendation letters is part of a professor's job. No need to be a gofer, and importantly, offering some sort of service in exchange for a recommendation sets up an unethical situation: recommendation letters should not be paid for in any way.



    Assuming your request is granted, it might be helpful to remind her of some of the things you've done related to her course, etc, as you've included here, since professors have many students and may not recall all the details.






    share|improve this answer




























    • Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

      – user352848
      Aug 16 at 18:51






    • 1





      @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

      – Bryan Krause
      Aug 16 at 19:05






    • 7





      To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

      – PLL
      Aug 16 at 21:00



















    2














    A much better way to help out this professor is simply to remind them about your interactions ("I took class X and received an A and you gave me excellent advice on how to start my undergraduate research project") so that it's easier for her to recall your background and actually write the letter.



    I remember being mildly upset by the fact that I had a letter of rec written by a professor who remembered me by name, yet several years later the letter was accidently given to me, I saw they had written "He received an A in Linear Algebra from me", when it should have been Differential Equations.






    share|improve this answer




























      Your Answer








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      3 Answers
      3






      active

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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      85














      It’s appropriate to ask for a letter, but completely inappropriate to offer a thing of value in exchange. Professors are already paid to do their job, which includes writing letters of recommendation, and it would be unethical for a professor to accept a favor or other thing of value in exchange for agreeing to do what is already a part of their job.






      share|improve this answer






























        85














        It’s appropriate to ask for a letter, but completely inappropriate to offer a thing of value in exchange. Professors are already paid to do their job, which includes writing letters of recommendation, and it would be unethical for a professor to accept a favor or other thing of value in exchange for agreeing to do what is already a part of their job.






        share|improve this answer




























          85












          85








          85







          It’s appropriate to ask for a letter, but completely inappropriate to offer a thing of value in exchange. Professors are already paid to do their job, which includes writing letters of recommendation, and it would be unethical for a professor to accept a favor or other thing of value in exchange for agreeing to do what is already a part of their job.






          share|improve this answer













          It’s appropriate to ask for a letter, but completely inappropriate to offer a thing of value in exchange. Professors are already paid to do their job, which includes writing letters of recommendation, and it would be unethical for a professor to accept a favor or other thing of value in exchange for agreeing to do what is already a part of their job.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 16 at 20:46









          Dan RomikDan Romik

          92k23 gold badges199 silver badges305 bronze badges




          92k23 gold badges199 silver badges305 bronze badges




























              37














              Just ask for the letter. Writing recommendation letters is part of a professor's job. No need to be a gofer, and importantly, offering some sort of service in exchange for a recommendation sets up an unethical situation: recommendation letters should not be paid for in any way.



              Assuming your request is granted, it might be helpful to remind her of some of the things you've done related to her course, etc, as you've included here, since professors have many students and may not recall all the details.






              share|improve this answer




























              • Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

                – user352848
                Aug 16 at 18:51






              • 1





                @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

                – Bryan Krause
                Aug 16 at 19:05






              • 7





                To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

                – PLL
                Aug 16 at 21:00
















              37














              Just ask for the letter. Writing recommendation letters is part of a professor's job. No need to be a gofer, and importantly, offering some sort of service in exchange for a recommendation sets up an unethical situation: recommendation letters should not be paid for in any way.



              Assuming your request is granted, it might be helpful to remind her of some of the things you've done related to her course, etc, as you've included here, since professors have many students and may not recall all the details.






              share|improve this answer




























              • Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

                – user352848
                Aug 16 at 18:51






              • 1





                @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

                – Bryan Krause
                Aug 16 at 19:05






              • 7





                To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

                – PLL
                Aug 16 at 21:00














              37












              37








              37







              Just ask for the letter. Writing recommendation letters is part of a professor's job. No need to be a gofer, and importantly, offering some sort of service in exchange for a recommendation sets up an unethical situation: recommendation letters should not be paid for in any way.



              Assuming your request is granted, it might be helpful to remind her of some of the things you've done related to her course, etc, as you've included here, since professors have many students and may not recall all the details.






              share|improve this answer















              Just ask for the letter. Writing recommendation letters is part of a professor's job. No need to be a gofer, and importantly, offering some sort of service in exchange for a recommendation sets up an unethical situation: recommendation letters should not be paid for in any way.



              Assuming your request is granted, it might be helpful to remind her of some of the things you've done related to her course, etc, as you've included here, since professors have many students and may not recall all the details.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 2 days ago

























              answered Aug 16 at 18:39









              Bryan KrauseBryan Krause

              20.6k5 gold badges61 silver badges82 bronze badges




              20.6k5 gold badges61 silver badges82 bronze badges
















              • Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

                – user352848
                Aug 16 at 18:51






              • 1





                @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

                – Bryan Krause
                Aug 16 at 19:05






              • 7





                To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

                – PLL
                Aug 16 at 21:00



















              • Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

                – user352848
                Aug 16 at 18:51






              • 1





                @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

                – Bryan Krause
                Aug 16 at 19:05






              • 7





                To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

                – PLL
                Aug 16 at 21:00

















              Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

              – user352848
              Aug 16 at 18:51





              Thank you. I’ll probably email her and bring up the things I mentioned here. Not sure if scheduling to meet her in person is better.

              – user352848
              Aug 16 at 18:51




              1




              1





              @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

              – Bryan Krause
              Aug 16 at 19:05





              @user352848 I'd probably start with just the email asking if she can write a letter; you can offer to be available to meet but I wouldn't organize a meeting just to ask. Some professors like to meet in person to discuss letters with students, others prefer written information to help them structure the letter (such as a CV, reminders of your association with them like I suggested, future plans, and particular attributes you might want them to focus on).

              – Bryan Krause
              Aug 16 at 19:05




              7




              7





              To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

              – PLL
              Aug 16 at 21:00





              To supplement this answer, a standard request email could be something like: “Dear Professor Jones, Would you be willing to provide me with a letter of recommendation? In case you don’t recall me, I took your course on Practical Theorising in spring 2018, receiving an A, and you also gave me some very helpful advice on finding undergrad research projects in Theory of Modelling. I am now applying to Masters programmes in Applied Theoretics, and would be very grateful if you can provide a letter of reference. Many thanks, @user352848.”

              – PLL
              Aug 16 at 21:00











              2














              A much better way to help out this professor is simply to remind them about your interactions ("I took class X and received an A and you gave me excellent advice on how to start my undergraduate research project") so that it's easier for her to recall your background and actually write the letter.



              I remember being mildly upset by the fact that I had a letter of rec written by a professor who remembered me by name, yet several years later the letter was accidently given to me, I saw they had written "He received an A in Linear Algebra from me", when it should have been Differential Equations.






              share|improve this answer






























                2














                A much better way to help out this professor is simply to remind them about your interactions ("I took class X and received an A and you gave me excellent advice on how to start my undergraduate research project") so that it's easier for her to recall your background and actually write the letter.



                I remember being mildly upset by the fact that I had a letter of rec written by a professor who remembered me by name, yet several years later the letter was accidently given to me, I saw they had written "He received an A in Linear Algebra from me", when it should have been Differential Equations.






                share|improve this answer




























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  A much better way to help out this professor is simply to remind them about your interactions ("I took class X and received an A and you gave me excellent advice on how to start my undergraduate research project") so that it's easier for her to recall your background and actually write the letter.



                  I remember being mildly upset by the fact that I had a letter of rec written by a professor who remembered me by name, yet several years later the letter was accidently given to me, I saw they had written "He received an A in Linear Algebra from me", when it should have been Differential Equations.






                  share|improve this answer













                  A much better way to help out this professor is simply to remind them about your interactions ("I took class X and received an A and you gave me excellent advice on how to start my undergraduate research project") so that it's easier for her to recall your background and actually write the letter.



                  I remember being mildly upset by the fact that I had a letter of rec written by a professor who remembered me by name, yet several years later the letter was accidently given to me, I saw they had written "He received an A in Linear Algebra from me", when it should have been Differential Equations.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 15 hours ago









                  Cliff ABCliff AB

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