I've been working in the industry a couple years (3 years), but I'm hoping to go to grad school for a PhD one day. How, in particular, would I get letters of recommendation? A couple of grad school apps I looked at said they wanted at least 2 letters from people in academia, so I'm not sure how I would get these. Do people out of school for a while usually:
1. Get a masters first, and use the professors they meet while getting the masters to write letters of recommendation for the PhD school? (I'm guessing masters places don't require letters from academia? Also, how often are masters programs funded?)
2. Somehow do research with someone somewhere? (If so, how?)
3. If I did somehow find one of my old professors who remembered me enough to write a decent recommendation now, I'm not planning (for family issues) to apply this coming Fall, so is there some way to store the recommendation until later (besides asking the professor to keep it... the main professor I'm thinking of is pretty unorganized, so I doubt he'd be able to keep track of anything he wrote now)?
I've continued to seriously study topics in my areas of interest (my reasons for not going to straight to grad school were family-related), so I'm not worried about being able to return to the student lifestyle, just how I would get recommendations. And I think I would have a had a good chance at top 10 schools if I'd gone straight, based on other people I know who did, though I'm not sure how working in the industry affects my chances now.