Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the PP above whose spouse is a teacher, what has been typical in terms of gestures of appreciation once May rolls around? A card? An email? A gift (what might that be)?
When my child had received all of her acceptances, she updated recommenders with the good news (in writing) and thanked them for their contribution to her success. No gift. It is part of a high school teachers job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also the student won’t be penalized for a late rec, happens all the time.
+1. My kid went to TJ which knows competitive college admissions. They say, the kid is held responsible for their portion of the application being in on time. But, if outside the kids control (transcripts and recommendations) are late, the kid is held harmless and there is a little wiggle room on the deadline. (They went on to add that, of course, your kids recommendation and transcript will be in on time).
If it isn’t in, email the teacher tomorrow, cc: guidance counselors, a nice, “it appears you forgot”.
I would be politer than this. This is accusatory, not the way to go.
+1. I would go with the PP's suggested route of "is there anything else you need from me" as a much more polite nudge.
Anonymous wrote:To the PP above whose spouse is a teacher, what has been typical in terms of gestures of appreciation once May rolls around? A card? An email? A gift (what might that be)?
Anonymous wrote:To the PP above whose spouse is a teacher, what has been typical in terms of gestures of appreciation once May rolls around? A card? An email? A gift (what might that be)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the PP above whose spouse is a teacher, what has been typical in terms of gestures of appreciation once May rolls around? A card? An email? A gift (what might that be)?
I’ve been writing college recommendation letters for 15 years, usually 20 or so a year. I’ve been thanked only 2-3 times. A thank-you email would mean so much to the teachers who took the time to write these personalized letters!
I'd like to think my child would do this on her own, but I will absolutely be following up to make sure she does!!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also the student won’t be penalized for a late rec, happens all the time.
+1. My kid went to TJ which knows competitive college admissions. They say, the kid is held responsible for their portion of the application being in on time. But, if outside the kids control (transcripts and recommendations) are late, the kid is held harmless and there is a little wiggle room on the deadline. (They went on to add that, of course, your kids recommendation and transcript will be in on time).
If it isn’t in, email the teacher tomorrow, cc: guidance counselors, a nice, “it appears you forgot”.
I would be politer than this. This is accusatory, not the way to go.
+1. I would go with the PP's suggested route of "is there anything else you need from me" as a much more polite nudge.