- Thu Jun 05, 2025 11:26 am
#113106
Hi all,
I’m planning to apply to law school this fall for the 2026 cycle and could use some advice on how to follow up with a professor who hasn’t responded to my LOR request.
I graduated last year and recently visited my college campus to reconnect with professors. I reached out in advance to two faculty members I hoped would write my academic letters. One responded promptly, agreed to write a letter, and we were able to catch up in person, which was wonderful. However, I never heard back from the other professor, whom I knew well as a student and had taken multiple classes with, so I was a bit surprised by the silence.
It’s been about a month, and I want to follow up respectfully since I know professors get swamped with emails. Would it be too forward to include my resume and samples of past coursework in that follow-up? In my initial email, I shared some updates about what I do now, why I'm interested in law school, and what skills I gained from their classes and guidance, so I’m not sure if the added materials would be helpful context or come across as presumptuous given the lack of response. Any advice on how to strike the right tone would be much appreciated! Thanks in advance.
I’m planning to apply to law school this fall for the 2026 cycle and could use some advice on how to follow up with a professor who hasn’t responded to my LOR request.
I graduated last year and recently visited my college campus to reconnect with professors. I reached out in advance to two faculty members I hoped would write my academic letters. One responded promptly, agreed to write a letter, and we were able to catch up in person, which was wonderful. However, I never heard back from the other professor, whom I knew well as a student and had taken multiple classes with, so I was a bit surprised by the silence.
It’s been about a month, and I want to follow up respectfully since I know professors get swamped with emails. Would it be too forward to include my resume and samples of past coursework in that follow-up? In my initial email, I shared some updates about what I do now, why I'm interested in law school, and what skills I gained from their classes and guidance, so I’m not sure if the added materials would be helpful context or come across as presumptuous given the lack of response. Any advice on how to strike the right tone would be much appreciated! Thanks in advance.