In our most recent "how can we help you?" thread, Amanda writes:
[W]hat are the ethics as far as *reading* [recommendation] letters are concerned[?]. Marcus, you said, you don't focus much on letters. Would a really bad letter turn you off a candidate you otherwise liked? I wills say that at R1's, and i've been involved in searches at 3 different institutions, letters are taken extremely seriously. Professors do distinguish between strong/stronger, sounding "restrained" etc. And with grad school applications they are maybe even more important. So what should a search committee member do when a candidate has, say, 1 really strong letter, 1 decent letter, and 1 bad letter?
Good questions. I'm really curious to hear how people answer. Here are my answers, beginning with a quick clarification. Amanda is right that I don't focus much on recommendation letters. This is because the science on this is unequivocal. First, recommendation letters as standardly evaluated poorly predict future performance. In fact, they have some of the lowest predictive validity of future performance of any commonly used measure. Second, they show demonstrable gender bias in academia specifically. Consequently, I'm with Mike Huemer: I don't think the hiring process in academia should include recommendation letters at all anymore. I think they do more harm than good, making hiring more a matter of personal reputation than actual achievement.
The only minor exception I have to this (and I may need to rethink it in the interest of consistency with the science) is that I have tended to give teaching letters some weight–but mostly in virtue of their descriptive (rather than evaluative) features. Basically, when I read a teaching letter, I read them to learn about what the person does in the classroom. What is their teaching style like? How do they engage with students? That's what I want to know, not what the letter writer thinks of their teaching (since I know very well from experience that different people can have very different views on what constitutes a good instructor or good classroom performance). When it comes to research letters, I have to confess that I give them very little weight, if any. If a person has published their tail off and I read their work and it is good and interesting, that's all I need to know. Conversely, if I a person hasn't published their tail off and I read their work and it seems mediocre, that's all I need to know. Either way, letters seem to me to introduce more noise than anything else. Someone can be a good philosopher but rub people the wrong way–or simply do a kind of philosophy (or do philosophy in a way) that their letter writers don't value.
I recognize that I am probably in the minority on this. Some people think letters are essential. While I disagree, I also recognize (despite the science) that there is substantial controversy over their usefulness. In any case, to answer Amanda's questions: No, a bad letter wouldn't turn me off. For all I know, a bad letter could be reflective of the candidate–but it could also be more reflective of the letter writer than anything else (I take it that I am not alone in realizing there are some meanspirited jerks in the profession, as in life more generally!). Now, if I got three letters, all of which raised very serious concerns about someone (indicating, let's say, that they behave unprofessionally), that would be a different story. But if I got one good letter, one okay letter, and one bad letter, I'd personally just set them aside and evaluate the candidate's file myself.
But these are just my answers to Amanda's questions. What are yours?
Leave a Reply to anonymous grumpy philosopherCancel reply