<p>And they are both excellent, I think. At this point, I have to choose one or the other for several of my colleges because both recommenders are not academic teachers. </p>
<p>Would anyone care to read them and tell me which one is better? PM me if interested along with your email so I can send you the letters.</p>
<p>Well one of them is my old counselor who has retired and he decided to just let me send the recommendation even though I provided the envelopes. I'm not like changing the content of the letter or anything.</p>
<p>I am sending all my letter of recommendations since teachers don't send them in our school but I will have them in an envelope and probably make them sign it.</p>
<p>I've seen a lot of teachers let the students proofread. I guess the teachers don't want to feel bad if they make a big mistake that they somehow overlooked. Not supposed to happen, but seriously, most recommendations are jokes anymore.
Most from my school go:
<short intro="" on="" who="" teacher="" is="" and="" what="" class="" student="" was="" in="">
<academic info="" for="" that="" class="">
<extra curriculars="" maybe="">
<student was="" real="" great="" blah="" blah,="" perfect="" addition="" to="" your="" university=""></student></extra></academic></short></p>