Along with the applicant's scholarship essays the letters of recommendation form the backbone of an application. These are extremely competitive awards; letters of recommendation cannot be pro-forma, general, or form letters. The evaluation committees will be looking at faculty letters as way of understanding the potential of the applicant as well as learn more context about the candidate's academic journey, commitment to academic or global enagement (or both). Generally, letters will exceed one page.
Strong letters of recommendation will include:
- A description of your familiarity with the applicant. Applicants should seek recommendations from individuals who they have had significant contact with.
- The applicant's achievements. Application essays are limited in space and letters of recommendation can help flesh out achievements that an applicant could not include or delve into.
- The applicant's potential with regards to the scholarship criteria.
- How the scholarship could help the applicant achieve their long term goals and what (if any) benefit the applicant's proposal will have on the discipline.
- Why you believe, given the scholarship critieria, the applicant merits consideration from the review committee.