EducationUSA

Letters of Recommendation: How to Ask, When, and What Your Teacher Should Actually Write

Everything international students need to know to get strong recommendation letters that impress top universities.

Letters of recommendation are the only part of your application not written by you — and that’s exactly why admissions officers read them so carefully. Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Yale, and other selective schools agree: a truly insightful letter can push a borderline applicant into the “accepted” pile.

When to Ask

  • March–May of 11th grade (junior year)
    Best time. Teachers remember you well, have less stress, and can write over the summer.
  • September–early October of 12th grade (senior year)
    Still okay, but riskier. Teachers are busy with new classes.
  • After November 1
    Too late for Early Decision and stressful for Regular Decision. Avoid if possible.

Who to Ask

  • Core academic teacher (10th or 11th grade)
    Required by almost every university (math, science, literature, history, foreign language).
  • Second core teacher from a different subject
    Shows you excel across disciplines.
  • Optional “Other recommender”
    Research mentor, coach, NGO supervisor, or employer who knows a different side of you.

Choose teachers who: know you well (beyond grades), saw you improve or take initiative, teach a subject related to your intended major (if possible)

How to Ask — It Also Matters

When you ask, do it in person if possible — it’s far more effective than email. And if you do email, make sure it’s professional. Many students forget that official email style matters: no more messages without a subject line or introduction. Always include a polite greeting, explain who you are, what you need, and provide deadlines and instructions. Respect the person you’re writing to — it makes a big difference.

Here’s a simple script:

“Ms./Mr. [Name], I’m applying to universities in the United States this year and I’m wondering if you would feel comfortable writing me a strong letter of recommendation. You know my work in [subject] better than anyone, and I think your perspective would be very valuable to the admissions committee. I can provide all the details, deadlines, and materials you need.”

If they hesitate → thank them and ask someone else

Once they agree, make their job easy. Send a “recommendation packet” within a week or two: a one-page document with your intended major, top universities, deadlines, and submission instructions; a bullet-point list of specific moments they might mention (like when you helped classmates after school or completed an independent research project); your final essay draft; and a handwritten thank-you note

What do admissions officers actually want to read?

Strong letters tell a story only that teacher can share, show intellectual curiosity and growth, and compare you to other strong students (“one of the top 3 students I’ve taught in 18 years”). Generic praise like “hard-working and responsible” doesn’t help. Specific anecdotes do!

Finally, follow up politely. Send reminders 10–14 days before deadlines, thank your teachers after submission with a small gift and a handwritten card, and share your admission results — they love hearing they made a difference.

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