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Standardized Letters of Standardized Letters of Recommendation Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Surgery Stanford University Stanford University

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Page 1: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized Letters of RecommendationStandardized Letters of Recommendation

Anna H. Messner, MDAnna H. Messner, MDProfessor & Vice ChairProfessor & Vice Chair

Program DirectorProgram DirectorOtolaryngology/Head & Neck SurgeryOtolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery

Stanford UniversityStanford University

Page 2: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Application season

Page 3: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Why have letters?

• Review of 966 LOR to General surgery program• 24% were helpful in evaluation process

Fortune JB. The content and value of letters of recommendation in the resident candidate evaluative process. Curr Surg 2002

Page 4: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Why have letters? The theory.

• Information on past performance which may be a good predictor of future success

• Unique features• Insight into typical performance

• (as opposed to maximal performance)

• Opportunity to explain a less than perfect application• Opportunity to promote students he/she envisions as

becoming future leaders in field.

Page 5: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Medicine “seems to have taken up permanent residence along the shores of Lake Wobegon. All of the applicants are above average—way above.”

Schneider A. Why you can’t trust letters of recommendation. Chron High Educ 2000

All are outstanding

Page 6: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Writing letters- The basics

1. Introduction

2. Relationship to applicantLength of time he/she has known subject

Context of relationship

Right to view waived

3. Describe subject’s “record,”Brief summary of subject’s academic performance

Summary of clinical performance

4. Subject’s traits and performance are evaluated and compared to peers (+ unique features).

5. Summary sentence

Page 7: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

OHNS Words/letter

• 763 letters

• Mean = 329 (82-1297)

• Chair of dept (290) vs others (350) (p<.001)

Le

tte

rs

Messner A, Shimahara E Laryngoscope 2009

Page 8: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

What we currently do…

•Look for Standout adjectives (average 2.6 in OHNS letters) • star, excellent, superb, gifted, extraordinary, outstanding, unique, exceptional,

unparalleled, superstar, finest, exquisite, stellar, sterling, phenomenal, ideal, exemplary

•Grindstone adjectives: • Hardworking, resolve, conscientious, dependable, meticulous, thorough, diligent,

dedicated, careful, responsible, reliable, tireless, solid

•“Gets along with others”, “Team player”•“Compassionate, Caring, Kind, Empathy”•“Intelligent”

Page 9: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Features of letters

• Leadership potential• High match rank• Sense of humor

• Final sentence: Intentionally ambiguous • Recommend him without hesitation vs recommend highly vs highest recommendation

vs absolute highest recommendation• Strong recommendation vs very strong recommendation vs strongest recommendation

• Compare letters from same letter writer

Page 10: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Watch for doubt raisers

• “Technical skills were average.”• “I have discussed alternative career options”• “Made an effort to be an effective team member.”• “Average fund of knowledge”• “His score of 210 accurately reflects his knowledge level.”

Page 11: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Doubt raisers

• “It absolutely amazes me how he can work with others.”

• “He’s always trying.”• “I assure you that no

person would be better for the job.”

Doubt Raisers

Page 12: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Typical Letter analysis: beginning & endDear Program Director:

 

I have been asked to submit a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe who has waived her right to see this letter. I have known Jane for the past 2 years since she first became interested in Otolaryngology.

 

Jane is a fourth year medical student at X School of Medicine. She graduated from Y University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts and History. She has achieved several awards during her medical school tenure including “Outstanding Service” in April 2006. This is an award elected annually by current X medical students to the one third year student who contributes significantly to improving the lives of fellow students. Additionally, Jane obtained honors in pediatrics, a high pass in surgery, a high pass in obstetrics and gynecology.

 

Jane rotated on the Head and Neck Surgery Service in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at S School of Medicine. During her rotation Jane performed in an outstanding manner. She is a bright and intelligent student who has an excellent knowledge of the head and neck anatomy and diseases that afflict the head and neck.

 

She was actively engaged throughout her rotation in caring for the head and neck cancer patients in the ward. Additionally, she played an active role in the operating room where she clearly demonstrated an affinity for surgery. She has excellent hand-eye coordination and an excellent sense of the anatomy. Jane was well liked by her peers, the residents and the attending staff. She is a pleasant person to work with. She is hard working and while somewhat shy Jane is clearly well informed and well read.

 

In general I was extremely impressed with this young student who I feel will make an outstanding contribution to any otolaryngology head and neck surgery training program.

 

As a result, I would like to submit a very strong letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe. If I can be of further assistance please feel free to contact me.

 

Sincerely,

Page 13: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Typical Letter- ignore duplicationDear Program Director:

 

I have been asked to submit a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe who has waived her right to see this letter. I have known Jane for the past 2 years since she first became interested in Otolaryngology.

 

Jane is a fourth year medical student at X School of Medicine. She graduated from Y University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts and History. She has achieved several awards during her medical school tenure including “Outstanding Service” in April 2006. This is an award elected annually by current X medical students to the one third year student who contributes significantly to improving the lives of fellow students. Additionally, Jane obtained honors in pediatrics, a high pass in surgery, a high pass in obstetrics and gynecology.

 

Jane rotated on the Head and Neck Surgery Service in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at S School of Medicine. During her rotation Jane performed in an outstanding manner. She is a bright and intelligent student who has an excellent knowledge of the head and neck anatomy and diseases that afflict the head and neck.

 

She was actively engaged throughout her rotation in caring for the head and neck cancer patients in the ward. Additionally, she played an active role in the operating room where she clearly demonstrated an affinity for surgery. She has excellent hand-eye coordination and an excellent sense of the anatomy. Jane was well liked by her peers, the residents and the attending staff. She is a pleasant person to work with. She is hard working and while somewhat shy Jane is clearly well informed and well read.

 

In general I was extremely impressed with this young student who I feel will make an outstanding contribution to any otolaryngology head and neck surgery training program.

 

As a result, I would like to submit a very strong letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe. If I can be of further assistance please feel free to contact me.

 

Sincerely,

Page 14: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Typical Letter analysis: standouts, grindstone, team player

Dear Program Director:

 

I have been asked to submit a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe who has waived her right to see this letter. I have known Jane for the past 2 years since she first became interested in Otolaryngology.

 

Jane is a fourth year medical student at X School of Medicine. She graduated from Y University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts and History. She has achieved several awards during her medical school tenure including “Outstanding Service” in April 2006. This is an award elected annually by current X medical students to the one third year student who contributes significantly to improving the lives of fellow students. Additionally, Jane obtained honors in pediatrics, a high pass in surgery, a high pass in obstetrics and gynecology.

 

Jane rotated on the Head and Neck Surgery Service in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at S School of Medicine. During her rotation Jane performed in an outstanding manner. She is a bright and intelligent student who has an excellent knowledge of the head and neck anatomy and diseases that afflict the head and neck.

 

She was actively engaged throughout her rotation in caring for the head and neck cancer patients in the ward. Additionally, she played an active role in the operating room where she clearly demonstrated an affinity for surgery. She has excellent hand-eye coordination and an excellent sense of the anatomy. Jane was well liked by her peers, the residents and the attending staff. She is a pleasant person to work with. She is hard working and while somewhat shy Jane is clearly well informed and well read.

 

In general I was extremely impressed with this young student who I feel will make an outstanding contribution to any otolaryngology head and neck surgery training program.

 

As a result, I would like to submit a very strong letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe. If I can be of further assistance please feel free to contact me.

 

Sincerely,

Page 15: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Typical Letter analysis: doubt raisers Dear Program Director:

 

I have been asked to submit a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe who has waived her right to see this letter. I have known Jane for the past 2 years since she first became interested in Otolaryngology.

 

Jane is a fourth year medical student at X School of Medicine. She graduated from Y University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts and History. She has achieved several awards during her medical school tenure including “Outstanding Service” in April 2006. This is an award elected annually by current X medical students to the one third year student who contributes significantly to improving the lives of fellow students. Additionally, Jane obtained honors in pediatrics, a high pass in surgery, a high pass in obstetrics and gynecology.

 

Jane rotated on the Head and Neck Surgery Service in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at S School of Medicine. During her rotation Jane performed in an outstanding manner. She is a bright and intelligent student who has an excellent knowledge of the head and neck anatomy and diseases that afflict the head and neck.

 

She was actively engaged throughout her rotation in caring for the head and neck cancer patients in the ward. Additionally, she played an active role in the operating room where she clearly demonstrated an affinity for surgery. She has excellent hand-eye coordination and an excellent sense of the anatomy. Jane was well liked by her peers, the residents and the attending staff. She is a pleasant person to

work with. She is hard working and while somewhat shy Jane is clearly well informed and well read.

 

In general I was extremely impressed with this young student who I feel will make an outstanding contribution to any otolaryngology head and neck surgery training program.

 

As a result, I would like to submit a very strong letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe. If I can be of further assistance please feel free to contact me.

 

Sincerely,

Page 16: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Typical LetterDear Program Director:

 

I have been asked to submit a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe who has waived her right to see this letter. I have known Jane for the past 2 years since she first became interested in Otolaryngology.

 

Jane is a fourth year medical student at X School of Medicine. She graduated from Y University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts and History. She has achieved several awards during her medical school tenure including “Outstanding Service” in April 2006. This is an award elected annually by current X medical students to the one third year student who contributes significantly to improving the lives of fellow students. Additionally, Jane obtained honors in pediatrics, a high pass in surgery, a high pass in obstetrics and gynecology.

 

Jane rotated on the Head and Neck Surgery Service in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at S School of Medicine. During her rotation Jane performed in an outstanding manner. She is a bright and intelligent student who has an excellent knowledge of the head and neck anatomy and diseases that afflict the head and neck.

 

She was actively engaged throughout her rotation in caring for the head and neck cancer patients in the ward. Additionally, she played an active role in the operating room where she clearly demonstrated an affinity for surgery. She has excellent hand-eye coordination and an excellent sense of the anatomy. Jane was well liked by her peers, the residents and the attending staff. She is a pleasant person to work with. She is hard working and while somewhat shy Jane is clearly well informed and well read.

 

In general I was extremely impressed with this young student who I feel will make an outstanding contribution to any otolaryngology head and neck surgery training program.

 

As a result, I would like to submit a very strong letter of recommendation on behalf of Jane Doe. If I can be of further assistance please feel free to contact me.

 

Sincerely,

NOTE: nothing unique, interesting, no comparison to peers, no mention leadership potential, no humor, no match potential

Page 17: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Letter of Minimal Assurance

“I believe that Joe is a strong candidate for a residency position and that he will ultimately be an excellent otolaryngologist and contributor to medicine. He is passionately committed to this goal and he is driven by that commitment. He is a unique person, and one whom you will enjoy meeting and interviewing.

I would of course welcome a direct phone call regarding this letter.

Thank you for considering Joe for an interview position.”

Page 18: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Current Status

• Average program: 250 applications x 4 letters = 1000 letters• Average letter = 329 words• Time = 1 min/letter (without analysis)• 1000 min = 17 hours.

• Result: Letters often not used to make 1st cut• Increased reliance on USMLE scores

• And… many not read at all.

Page 19: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized letter of recommendation (SLOR)

• Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors created SLOR

• Successfully used since 1996

Page 20: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Comparison of SLOR & NLOR

• Part I: Compared 20 SLOR and 20 NLOR• 7- point Likert-type scale

• 4 raters (2 experienced, 2 inexperienced)

• Results• Interrater reliability of SLOR = 0.97, NLOR 0.78

• Average time to interpret SLOR = 16 sec, NLOR = 90 sec

Girzadas DV Jr, Harwood RC, Dearie J, Garrett S. Acad Emerg Med. 1998 Nov;5(11):1101-4

Page 21: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Comparison of SLOR & NLOR

• Part I: Compared 20 SLOR and 20 NLOR• 7- point Likert-type scale• 4 raters (2 experienced, 2 inexperienced)

• Results• Interrater reliability of SLOR = 0.97, NLOR 0.78• Average time to interpret SLOR = 16 sec, NLOR = 90 sec

• Part II: 207 SLOR/NLOR pairs• Results

• 54% given same numeric value, 39% differed by one point, 6% differed by 2 points. Overall correlation was 0.58.

Girzadas DV Jr, Harwood RC, Dearie J, Garrett S. Acad Emerg Med. 1998 Nov;5(11):1101-4

Page 22: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

EM SLOR

• 173 surveys of PD organization (70% response rate)• “Compared with the narrative LOR, please rate the SLOR in

terms of:”• Ability to discriminate differences between candidates

• Better 75%, Same 18%, Worse 7%

• Ease of reading and incorporating into ranking scheme

• Better 84%, Same 12% Worse 4%

• Ease of completion

• Better 83%, Same 9%, Worse 4%

• Would you like to continue using the SLOR?

• Yes 90%, No 7%

Keim SM, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 1999 Nov;6(11):1141-6

Page 23: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Proposed Standardized Letter of Recommendation

Page 24: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 25: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 26: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Compare to other medical students

Page 27: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 28: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 29: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 30: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 31: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 32: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Standardized LOR

Page 33: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Advantages of SLOR

• More consistent information• Less duplication- of contents of application and letters• Less time to complete & interpret• Information less dependent on letter writer (more fair)

• (A superb letter writer may portray a “good” candidate in stratospheric terms, whereas a mediocre letter writer may portray a “superb” candidate less positively)

• Still have opportunity to tell about unique features of applicant

Page 34: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Disadvantages of SLOR

• Potential loss of nuances• Much harder to make the average student look stupendous• Potential attending MD guilt • Don’t get to show off fancy Department stationary

• But OK to add Logo, or put form on stationary

Page 35: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Next Steps

• Open for comments until February 1, 2012• Send to [email protected]

• OPDO council will review all comments and revise proposed SLOR

• Assuming response is positive:• Will post SLOR on SUO-AADO website

• Email distribution to PDs and Chairs

• Need Program director assistance to get the word out to faculty and applicants

• Investigate information re SLOR in Oto journal

• Start using in spring/summer 2012

• Survey SUO/AADO/PD re use, then revise.

Page 36: Standardized Letters of Recommendation Anna H. Messner, MD Professor & Vice Chair Program Director Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery Stanford University

Conclusions

• Traditional letters have the potential to help with identifying top residency candidates– but often do not.

• A SLOR has the potential to increase the value of LOR while saving time.

• Please send all comments to:

[email protected]