Letter of recommendation format?

<p>Hello friends.
I am a student from South Korea applying for junior transfer to
DUKE and BROWN.</p>

<p>I have a very important question. Please help me out.</p>

<p>These colleges require 'instructor evaluation form' and 'college official's form'
Additinally, these two colleges require 'two letters of recommendation'.</p>

<p>I am having a trouble finding a format for letter of recommendation.
As far as i know, the process for those letters needs student to "waive" the right to read and then deliver it to professors who write the letter.</p>

<p>The 'instructor evaluation form' and 'college official's form' from Common Application are made that way. I check/sign waive, and then deliver it to professor.</p>

<p>But I can't see about the format of letter of recommendation in college's website.</p>

<p>So my quesetion is
: If the two college uses common application, can i use 'instructor evaluation form' as a recommendation letter format?</p>

<p>Not sure this is answering your question, but I’ll give it a shot:</p>

<p>For CA schools, you fill out the top part and then give it to the LOR writer. The LOR writer fills out everything down to Evaluation. At that point they can EITHER write the LOR within the Evaluation space OR write their LOR on a separate sheet of paper. Most do the latter because they make a document file of the LOR and then make several copies for different schools.</p>

<p>If they write the LOR on a separate sheet of paper, they should use letterhead paper if possible and should include your name and identifying information such as your date of birth at the top incase it gets separated from the IE form. After that, they just say, ‘Dear Sir/Madam’ or ‘To Whom it may concern’ or whatever greeting they want, and then launch into the LOR.</p>

<p>So, you mean
If one college requires you to submit both IE and LOR,
then i don’t have to do ‘yes, i waive.,’ thing and put signature and then deliver to preofeessor?</p>

<p>LOR = Evaluation section of the IE</p>

<p>The waiver has to do with seeing your IE/LOR AFTER it is submitted to the school. When you sign the waiver you’re saying that you can’t ask the school to look at the IE/LORs that were submitted for you. There is no problem with you seeing the IE/LORs before they are sent to the school.</p>

<p>But be aware of one thing, with transcripts, IE/LOR, or any other information that someone else submits, you will want them to put it in an envelope, seal the envelope and then sign their signature across the seal. This assures that what is submitted is ‘official’ and has not been tampered with.</p>