So I'm in a bit of a conundrum, and would like to hear your ideas for solutions.
I'm aiming to apply to JHU's SAIS MA by Nov. 1st for a fall 2017 entrance (I know-- I want that early deadline advantage!) I need two letters of rec, and at least one from a professor.
In February of this year, a professor who I was a research assistant for as an undergrad, reached out to me to help her edit her trade dispute assessment paper to make it more agreeable and clarify complex ideas in preparation for publication at an American law journal. My job was basically to provide an educated layman's perspective on her paper. Having been her research assistant in the past, I assume she believed me credible enough to help her edit her paper. I was stoked, to say the least. Due to some complications on her end, the research assistantship was put on hold for a few months. In July--after those issues were resolved-- we reconnected to start the work again.
The work went fine. Or so I thought. I prepped for each Skype date (I'm living abroad and she's stateside), we discussed and made changes levelheadedly, and it continued this way for the length of the assistantship--which was to my disbelief only a few days. In exchange for helping her, she agreed to write my letter of rec, and pay $10/hour-- above the going rate for RA compensation. In the end, she asked me for a quote on the amount she owed me. I gave her the quote--which was based on my preparation time, Skype time, and brief work done in February. I ended with a humble call to action for the letter of rec.
My quote drew a sour response from her-- to the point where, out of left field, she expressed harbored frustration with the work I did, refused to acknowledge any work done in February, and discussion ultimately ended with me apologizing for misunderstanding the time I would be compensated for, and laconic, single-noted responses from her. However, in her final email, she was confusingly cordial. Short, but cordial. But no mention of the letter of rec.
As an alternative recommender, I've thought to contact my French professor-- who I took a majority of my upper-division French classes with, and who has written a letter of rec for me in the past-- but it's been about 3 years since I last contacted her, and 7 years since I studied under her... and honestly my Korean is probably better than my French at this point.
My questions:
Is it worth trying to repair the relationship with Professor A (either for a letter of rec or just for the sake of not burning bridges)?
Can a recommendation from a professor from so long ago really strengthen my application? If so, how?
Question
thetons8785
Hi there!
So I'm in a bit of a conundrum, and would like to hear your ideas for solutions.
I'm aiming to apply to JHU's SAIS MA by Nov. 1st for a fall 2017 entrance (I know-- I want that early deadline advantage!) I need two letters of rec, and at least one from a professor.
In February of this year, a professor who I was a research assistant for as an undergrad, reached out to me to help her edit her trade dispute assessment paper to make it more agreeable and clarify complex ideas in preparation for publication at an American law journal. My job was basically to provide an educated layman's perspective on her paper. Having been her research assistant in the past, I assume she believed me credible enough to help her edit her paper. I was stoked, to say the least. Due to some complications on her end, the research assistantship was put on hold for a few months. In July--after those issues were resolved-- we reconnected to start the work again.
The work went fine. Or so I thought. I prepped for each Skype date (I'm living abroad and she's stateside), we discussed and made changes levelheadedly, and it continued this way for the length of the assistantship--which was to my disbelief only a few days. In exchange for helping her, she agreed to write my letter of rec, and pay $10/hour-- above the going rate for RA compensation. In the end, she asked me for a quote on the amount she owed me. I gave her the quote--which was based on my preparation time, Skype time, and brief work done in February. I ended with a humble call to action for the letter of rec.
My quote drew a sour response from her-- to the point where, out of left field, she expressed harbored frustration with the work I did, refused to acknowledge any work done in February, and discussion ultimately ended with me apologizing for misunderstanding the time I would be compensated for, and laconic, single-noted responses from her. However, in her final email, she was confusingly cordial. Short, but cordial. But no mention of the letter of rec.
As an alternative recommender, I've thought to contact my French professor-- who I took a majority of my upper-division French classes with, and who has written a letter of rec for me in the past-- but it's been about 3 years since I last contacted her, and 7 years since I studied under her... and honestly my Korean is probably better than my French at this point.
My questions:
Thanks in advance for your insight!
7 answers to this question
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