Robert Siegel
Last updated: November, 2006
Last major revision: August 2002
Recommendation Notes
To all students requesting a letter of recommendation:
Please provide me with the following information.
Try to be as complete and specific as possible and follow the
outline.
(By supplying as much information as you can, it will help me get the
letter out in a timely fashion, allow me to write a significantly better
letter on your behalf.)
Hand me all the materials in a folder with your name, your
home and work
phone numbers, and the date on the front. Please supply whatever possible
on disk as well.
Put your name and the date on EVERYTHING you hand me.
- *** A) Informal letter to me - details listed below.
- B) Models, visual aids, presentations, etc
- C) Resume, or CV including summary of activities, employment and
other vital data (the first page of AMCAS)
- D) Copies or abstracts of any published papers you may have
written.
- E) Some notion of where you are applying.
- If you are applying for a special program or fellowship,
please provide me with written material concerning its nature and/or
eligibility criteria.
- F) Personal statement (the second page of the AMCAS application)
- [Please indicate whether or not that I may show your statement to
other
students in the future. If no indication is made, I will assume it is
O.K.]
- G) Grades and/or test scores if they are especially good, if they
show they range of classes you have taken, etc.
Details regarding informal letter
(Please be as specific as possible.)
- 1) When did we first meet?
(Be very specific. Include date and circumstances.)
- 2) A list of every other notable interactions that we have
had.
- (Assume I have forgotten everything, which is not
very far from the truth.)
- coffee about nothing (howe many times) brown bags, office
hours, email, etc specific conversations???
- 3) What is/was your major? If HB what is your area of
concentration?
- 4) Who is/was your advisor?
- 5) What year did you graduate?
- 6) Which course(s) did you take and what year?
- 7) Did you go on a trip with me? Oxford? PNG? Tanzania? Peru? Galapagos?
- 8) Describe in detail our interactions on the trip.
- 9) Did you go to Public Health Night?
-
- 10) Did you go to the Bay Area International Health Conference?
- 11) Did you go to any recommended lectures, seminars, or
conferences?
- 12 What did you do for your internship?
- 13) List all the courses you took from me
- 14) For each course, what were
your particular areas of interest?
List at least 3. Be very specific.
- 15) Did you go to section regularly and who was your T.A.?
Humans and Viruses,
- how much extra credit did you do?
- Describe your viral model in detail. Bring your write up and
PowerPoint presentation and model if possible.
- Describe your viral web page in detail.
- With whom did you work on the required problems?
- What topics or themes in virology did you find to be of greatest
interest?
- Did you go to any of the optional lectures or
laboratory demonstrations (esp diagnostic virology or EM)?
The Vaccine Revolution,
- tell me about your exact paper topic.
- List the specific topics of all your oral presentations
topics.
- **Be sure to include the on page write ups of your talks with Paper
Title, and Author, and Journal (one disk if possible).
The Impact of AIDS,
- What was your social involvement project
(in detail, including what you got out of it)?
- What was you book chapter? What was you specific contribution?
Who did you work with?
- What topics or themes concerning HIV did you find to be of
greatest interest?
Summer Honors College?
Describe your experience.
The Smallest Predator?
Describe your experience.
Ode to the Code?
Describe your experience.
The Chemistry Seminar?
Describe your experience.
12) Were you on a trip with me. Describe your experience.
13) List all activities that pertain to your area of
concentration.
14) Is there any personal or professional information that
does not appear elsewhere?
15) What would you like me to emphasize in your letter?
Also (if pertinent)
16) Foreign languages spoken? How well?
17) Cross cultural or travel experience?
18) Athletic and musical skills?
19) Delineate which activities are paid and which are
voluntary?
20) Anything else I should know that is not found
elsewhere in your application?
Remember again that the
more VERY SPECIFIC information and
direction you give
me, the better will be the letter that I can write. Be sure to include
any activities
that demonstrate leadership, creativity, empathy, clinical experience,
laboratory skills, etc. Include lots of specific details about your
lab experiences, including
techniques and the names of advisors.
When your materials are completed I will schedule a three hour
meeting with you during which I will write the letter. Your materials
will not be carefully read until that time. Our conversation will
be somewhat intermittent so feel free to bring some reading or
work to do. Please come prepared.
N.B. - In terms of when letters will be written,
TAs and students who have taken
multiple classes from me will
receive first priority. Secondarily, letters will be written on a modified
first-come-first-serve basis dating from when I receive your
materials.
I will commit myself to no more than one letter
per week. Given my teaching and work schedule, travel plans, and the number of letters to
which I have already committed
myself, I am currently scheduling letters for November,
2008.
Letters will be largely limited to those students who can meet
with me in person.
Students requesting letters should have scored within the top 20%
of the class or should have otherwise distinguished themselves in some
very specific way.
At the risk of being impersonal, let me offer you the option of
submitting your own draft of phrases I might use. This will facilitate my
ability to get your letter completed in a timely manner, and it will help
to insure that important aspects of your background get proper coverage.
Please bring your
materials with you when you come for your
recommendation meeting / letter writing session.
Send any specific questions to me by email -
siegelr@stanford.edu.
- If your letter is going to the Career Development Center (CDC), do
NOT include a stamped envelope.
(Usually students walk their sealed letters over.)
- I have copies of the CDC form. I prefer to use these (since I have
my part already filled out.)
- Addenda :
- 1) If you would like me to read your statement of purpose, I would
be happy to do that. Keep in mind that I will try to write excoriating
comments. Do NOT take them as a personal attack but rather as a sincerely
attempt to refine your letter. I will not be offended if you choose to
ignore my comments. In general you should try to get as much advice as
possible.
- 2) I can provide examples of other students statements of purpose.
Some are good, some are bad. You must decide for yourself.
- 3) I have several notes about applying to medical school (and
graduate school) that may be of some interest.
With very best wishes,
Robert Siegel
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