How to Request Letters of Evaluation

It can feel intimidating to ask someone for an LoE: you may be unsure how to ask or what information to provide to a potential writer. Learn some helpful tips from an admissions dean.

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Student and college professor talking

Letters of evaluation (LoE; i.e., letters of recommendation, LoR) are a required component in a medical school application. For medical schools, letters can further contextualize your attributes, skills, and experiences that are present in other aspects of your application or provide new evidence of these important characteristics. In particular, LoE provide admissions committees a more well-rounded perspective of you as an applicant and future medical student, especially when letters are written by those who know you from different contexts.

Asking for LoE may feel intimidating — you may be unsure how to ask or what information to provide to the potential writer. In some cases, a letter writer may ask an applicant to write their own letter and then the “writer” will modify it slightly and sign/submit or sign and submit as written. Such a scenario is generally seen as unethical by admissions committees. The purpose of the LoE is to provide an assessment and perspective of the applicant from the letter writer’s point of view, with examples of attributes observed and/or other personal characteristics or experiences. If an applicant is asked to write their own letter, the medical school admissions committee is not gaining this additional perspective. Below are some strategies to help you request strong LoE.

How to Navigate “The Ask” for LoE

What To Do if a Letter Writer Asks You to Write Your Own Letter

Ultimately you are headed into a highly ethical career, one that requires integrity and navigation of difficult situations. Agreeing to author your own letter and allowing someone else to sign it is dishonest. Maintain your integrity and strengthen your application by finding a letter writer who can authentically speak to your unique skills, interests, and abilities.

By Leila Harrison, Senior Associate Dean for Admissions and Student Affairs, Washington State University, Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine