Title: FINDING YOUR VOICE
1FINDING YOUR VOICE
Presented at the 2004 IACAC Conference Wyndham
Hotel Itasca Illinois
The Recommendation Letter
IACAC Conference Itasca, Illinois May 6,
2004 Sandie Gilbert Highland Park High
School Molly McBride Homewood-Flossmoor High
School Barb Selvaggio Lake Forest High School
2DIFFERENCES BETWEEN TEACHER AND COUNSELOR
RECOMMENDATIONS
- Teachers speak to first-hand knowledge and
observations - Counselors present the global student
3INTENT OF COUNSELOR RECOMMENDATION
- Advocate for student
- Highlight strengths/growth/uniqueness
- Bring the student to life
4PRE-RECOMMENDATION WRITING RESEARCH
- Interview the student
- - let them tell their story
- Highlight
- - most important extra-curricular activities
- - leadership
- - personal/academic strengths
- - personal/academic challenges
- - passions
- - calculated risks taken
- - papers/projects of which the student is most
proud
5PRE-RECOMMENDATION WRITING RESEARCH
- Overcoming obstacles
- Quotes from student
- Information from parents
- Information from teachers who are not writing a
recommendation for the student
6WRITING STORYTELLING
- Develop A Theme Unique To The Student
- Everything Gail has achieved through
extra-curricular involvement during high school
has been aimed at helping others and has resulted
in her growth as a coveted school leader. - Naomi has done a remarkable job in high school.
She has maintained and improved her grades while
simultaneously working her way from
individualized special education classes - to a completely mainstream college preparatory
curriculum. - Jack has made more positive gains out of
setbacks than almost any other student I have
encountered in my __ year career.
7WRITING STORYTELLING
- Begin With An Attention-Getting Introduction
- Ryan is a leader you want on your campus.
- I have agonized over writing this recommendation
for Lee Smith because I am afraid of not doing
Lee justice in my ability to paint a portrait of
him. - Incredible is the first word that comes to mind
when I think of Tracie.
8WRITING STORYTELLING
- Organize the Body of the Letter
- Move from general to specific
- Utilize topic sentences
- What Jenny lacks because of her learning
disabilities, she more than makes up in positive
attitude and drive.
9WRITING STORYTELLING
- Provide extensive coverage of a few select
topics - Avoid pat sentences or paragraphs
- Refer to activities rather providing a resume
- Relate what the student does or says
- Last year Tom worked at a restaurant after its
closing, he created his own part-time job of
programming computer software for food brokerage
companies. This job has blossomed into a company
which sells his product nationwide and earns
substantial profits.
10WRITING STORYTELLING
- It shocked me when Danny recently told me that
he suffered as a bagger at an upscale grocery
store this past summer. As I asked him to
elaborate on the suffering, Danny recounted his
horror at how the patrons of this store would
treat the hired help. He found customers ignored
and snapped at the help, treating employees in a
patronizing or invisible manner. Danny, being of
great moral fiber, found this experience an
appalling eye-opener. To him treating human
beings as anything other than equal is
unfathomable. This experience strengthened his
resolve to use any power he had in order to
ensure equal treatment for all people.
11WRITING STORYTELLING
- Show them rather than tell them
- cite examples/supporting details
- A vivid picture comes to my mind when asked to
write about Leah. Imagine a group of young
people nervously campaigning for student
government in a gym. Slowly, a six-foot ladder
rolled out Leah (all five feet of her) ascended
the ladder rung by rung to the delight of her
audience and proceeded to deliver her winning
speech. This moment in Leahs high school career
is so indicative of her marvelous sense of humor,
her willingness to take risks, her ability to
distinguish herself above the crowd. - When Stephanie began telling me about her
experience studying ecology in Costa Rica last
summer, I practically had to tie her to a chair
to prevent her from falling out of it because of
her enthusiasm of and excitement for learning.
12WRITING STORYTELLING
- Describe the student in relation to the school
population - As a mainstream Hispanic student in a school
whose Hispanic population is largely comprised of
ESL students, Jorge often finds himself not
fitting in with any culture at the school.
However, whereas many students would find this
predicament defeating, Jorge sees it as an
opportunity to rise to the challenge.
13STYLEORGANIZED STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS
- Conversational
- Choose dynamic words
- Dont underestimate the power of transitions
- Avoid redundancy
- Vary sentence length and word choice
- - A short sentence amid more compound sentences
sends a - powerful punch
- - Thesaurus and word choice dictionaries are
your best friends - Check grammar/usage/syntax
- - Spell check is not fool-proof
- - Utilize colleagues
14ILLUSTRATE INFORMATION NOT FOUND IN THE
TRANSCRIPT THROUGH EXAMPLE
- Motivation
- Academic and/or personal independence
- Originality/creativity
- Intellectual depth
- Causes for behaviors
15ILLUSTRATE INFORMATION NOT FOUND IN THE
TRANSCRIPT THROUGH EXAMPLE
- Reasons for demonstrated interests
- Unusual circumstances
- Patterns in performance
- Character traits
16SUMMARIZE THROUGH A CONCISE CONCLUSION
- Refer back to concept in introduction
- Offer what the student can lend to the campus
- State any concerns positively
17SUMMARIZE THROUGH A CONCISE CONCLUSION
- Thats Paul. He is the kind of person who I
pray will someday lead our country or discover a
medical breakthrough. We need more intelligent,
yet ethical, responsible, and moral people like
Paul. - Julie would be a great college tour guide
and a definite asset to any admission office. - Nate will excel in a program in which he can
continue getting assistance with his learning
differences.
18BEIGE STUDENTS
- A student is what he/she is
- Admissions can read between the lines
- Maintain your credibility while advocating for
your student - Matt has strong interpersonal skills.
Through he has matured later than many high
school students, he possesses the skills and
knowledge to succeed. I am confident that as he
finds his learning passion, he will soar to new
academic heights. - I know that Michael will go on to achieve
beyond what he has during high school as he
becomes more interested in what he is studying.
19WHATS WRONG WITH THESE EXAMPLES?
- Mikes creative writing ability and wit are
especially showcased in his work as one of the
editors of the school newspaper. Mike is
well-liked and respected by his peers, teachers,
and administrators. - Kathys reasons for stepping forward in the arts
go well beyond the talent and fortitude exhibited
to date. In the short span of two years, she has
studied, grown, diversified, spun off, and
solidified into a record number of separate
activities.
20Finding your individual voice will allow you to
become the best advocate for your students.