<p>Well, we have these forms which our teachers should fill (Evaluation A and B papers).
MIT</a> Admissions | Info For Schools & Counselors: Writing Evaluations
On this site I can see examples of teachers' reccomendations free of any directions (you know, on Ev A/B there's stuff like "What will you remember most about this student?" and a few other questions which they're supposed to answer). If my teacher wants to write about something particular, is it okay that he/she ignores E, F, G, H, I on Evaluation and write it in his/her own style?</p>
<p>Under "The</a> Freshman Application", the MIT site says
[quote]
We prefer that teachers use our forms, but it's okay if your high school has its own form. It's okay too for a teacher to submit a letter; we just ask that he/she attach it to our form - with your name and date of birth clearly indicated - and that the letter address the questions on our form.
[/quote]
So it's fine if your teacher writes a letter not on the form, but they'd prefer that he or she answer the questions on the form within the letter.</p>
<p>Thanks! That's exactly what I meant: if teacher can write an evaluation answering those questions in his/her own way.</p>
<p>Another question came to my mind. Do they prefer Evaluations to be handwritten or they may be printed? My teachers may want to write it on a computer though I don't know if they're allowed.</p>
<p>I would imagine they'd prefer printed evaluations -- they're much easier to read! :)</p>
<p>What about the translation? My maths teacher doesn't know a word in English. Should I send both versions or only the translated one? I doubt that any of the admission officers knows Polish :-)</p>
<p>Anyone knows what I should do?</p>
<p>id send in both versions.
of course, im sure MIT admission can find someone on campus who can read polish perfectly.</p>