- Start Early. Do not wait until the week before an
application is due to ask for a letter. Make sure you give all referees
ample time to review your project, ask questions about it, and craft
a thoughtful letter. As most professors will have several letters to
write for each student, and most write letters for many students in
a single funding season, give your referees as much time as possible.
- Ask the Appropriate Person. A well-known professor
may be impressive because of his or her own status, but may not be the
best person to write your letter. If this professor does not know your
work well and writes a bland or lukewarm letter of support, the famous
name will not help you. You should ask professors who are familiar with
your work and have been supportive of you at earlier stages of your
academic career. Depending on the type of grant, you should ask different
professors for letters. For example, for a teaching fellowship, you
should approach those with whom you have taught; for a research grant,
you should ask those both in and outside your department who have a
connection to your research interests. For some funding institutions,
being able to gain support outside of your own department demonstrates
that your research has wide appeal across disciplinary boundaries.
- Be Organized. Once a professor has agreed to write
you a letter, provide him or her with all the necessary information.
Such items include: background materials on the funding institution
and its selection criteria, the letter of recommendation form, a draft
of your proposal, and your c.v. Make a folder with all the above information
for each referee. They will appreciate your organization. Most referees
will have a base letter that they alter depending on the criteria for
each grant. Read through the selection criteria carefully and look at
which applicants have been funded in the past. (Most organizations provide
information about past awardees on their websites.) You can then tell
your referee what information to emphasize. A strong, but all-purpose
letter of support may not be enough given how competitive most grants
are. A good letter will address the applicant’s strengths and
professional potential as well as the feasibility and significance of
his or her project. As much as possible, a letter should respond to
the specific criteria established by each funding institution.
- Keep in Touch. Throughout your academic career you
will need to ask for letters of recommendation. Therefore, you want
to cultivate professional relationships with your primary letter writers.
Let them know how your research is progressing, what your new interests
are, and what awards you have received. Professors have a vested interest
in how their students fare and will want to help you. However, it is
the student’s responsibility to keep his or her professors apprised
of events. You will be happy you did when their strong letters of support
lead to funding.