Most health professions schools will require at least three letters of recommendation. Many mandate that two of those letters be from science faculty. This can be tricky at UC Davis, where most science courses contain hundreds of students. Regardless, this is what you have to achieve, so if you are serious about going to professional school, you will need to find ways to work with faculty or PIs.
The best letters say something about you as a person. Take a look at what the AAMC offers as advice to letter writers. Schools want to see more than "This student scored an A in my class." This means that you, as a current student, have to begin from day one building relationships with those around you. The more outgoing and persistent you are, the more likely you will find someone who will respond to you. This does not mean be inappropriate or obnoxious about your persuit for a letter, but rather, find individuals to mentor you in this process who could potentially serve the role as a letter writer down the road.
Here are some tips for asking for a LOR:
When you have chosen individuals to ask for a letter, begin by drafting a very professional, highly edited email asking for a meeting. You should speak with your letter writers in person or on the phone when asking. Before your meeting, put a packet together containing the following:
We want you to possess the highest level of professionalism when interacting with letter writers. You will receive a stronger letter the better you present yourself during this process.
When you show up to your appointment on time, be dressed slightly nicer than you would on an average day.
Shake their hand and thank them again for their time.
Tell them what you plan to do (ex. Apply to dental school this June).
Look at them and ask, "Would you be willing to write a strong letter of recommendation to support my application?" Pay attention to their response! You are asking for a positive letter, not just any letter. You do not need an average or weak letter. If that person behaves in any way to suggest that he/she cannot write a positive letter, let that person know that you will not be needing their help with this part of the process. If you have any doubt in your mind about that person's feelings about you, you should probably think about other options.
If your meeting goes well, you may be asked to answer additional questions or provide additional documents.
Soon after the meeting, you should send a well-written email thanking them for their time and offer to write a letter. Include any additional information they requested about you. Be sure to mention the deadline and offer to answer any further questions.
If the deadline is a week away and you haven't heard anything back, you can send another well-written email thanking them again and reminding them how to submit the letter. If the deadline has passed and you haven't heard anything, send another email thanking them and asking if they will be able to submit by a given date. Offer that if they cannot, it is fine but if they could let you know, you would greatly appreciate it.
HPA often hosts a panel based workshop in Winter or Spring Quarter comprised of UC Davis faculty members to give students advice on how to build relationships and ask for Letters of Recommendation. Stay connected and visit our Events page for updates.
For some programs, the TA is an acceptable letter writer. When appropriate, always ask if the faculty can co-sign the letter.
If you work with a PI and he/she is also a UCD faculty, that will sometimes count toward a science faculty if you acquired credit for the research.
Schools will not read your application until the required LOR are in your application. Give your letter writers PLENTY of time to submit so that your application becomes complete within a competitve timeframe. The worse case is having an otherwise complete application but missing one letter. It is your responsibility to ask the letter writers far enough in advance so that you are not projecting your emergency onto them. Respect their time and committments. Do not expect letters to be written within a month after asking. Ask 2-3 months before a deadline.
These are options to consider if you plan on taking gap year(s). If you plan to apply to multiple programs (MD/DO, etc.) this is a convenient way to have all of your letters in one place. (Please note the following are third party links and Links to commercial web sites do not imply endorsement.)
UC Davis Health Professions Advising
Email: healthprofessionsadvising@ucdavis.edu | Phone: (530) 752-6435
1090 Blue Ridge Rd. Davis, CA 95616
Stay connected by following us on Facebook and subscribing to our newslettter.
Links to commercial web sites do not imply endorsement by the University of California or its affiliates.
University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616 | 530-752-1011
Copyright © The Regents of the University of California, Davis campus. All rights reserved.