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This page last updated 9-3-99 |
In case any of you are
looking for recommendations from me (or need to give one for someone else)
perhaps this will help:
----------- Lexicon of Inconspicuously Ambiguous Recommendations (Ways
to handle those tricky situations! ) You're called upon for an opinion
of a friend who is extremely lazy. You don't want to lie --- but you also
don't want to risk losing even a lazy friend. Try this line: "In my opinion,"
you say as sincerely as you can manage, "you will be very fortunate to
get this person to work for you." This gem of double meaning is the creation
of Robert Thornton, a professor of economics at Lehigh University in Bethlehem,
PA. Thornton was frustrated about an occupational hazard for teachers,
having to write letters of recommendation for people with dubious qualifications,
so he put together an arsenal of statements that can be read two ways.
He calls his collection the Lexicon of Inconspicuously Ambiguous Recommendations.
Or LIAR, for short. LIAR may be used to offer a negative opinion of the
personal qualities, work habits or motivation of the candidate while allowing
the candidate to believe that it is high praise, Thornton explained last
week. Some examples from LIAR To describe a person who is totally inept:
I most enthusiastically recommend this candidate with no qualifications
whatsoever. To describe an ex-employee who had problems getting along with
fellow workers: I am pleased to say that this candidate is a former colleague
of mine. To describe a candidate who is so unproductive that the job would
be better left unfilled: I can assure you that no person would be better
for the job. To describe a job applicant who is not worth further consideration:
I would urge you to waste no time in making this candidate an offer of
employment. To describe a person with lackluster credentials: All in all,
I cannot say enough good things about this candidate or recommend him too
highly. Thornton pointed out that LIAR is not only useful in preserving
friendships, but it also can help avoid serious legal trouble in a time
when laws have eroded the confidentiality of letters of recommendation.
In most states, he noted, job applicants have the right to read the letters
of recommendations and can even file suit against the writer if the contents
are negative. When the writer uses LIAR, however, whether perceived correctly
or not by the candidate, the phrases are virtually litigation-proof, Thornton
said.
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