All posts by Michael Parascandola

How to Get Recommendation Letters

By: Sebastian Leung

In our ever-increasingly competitive world, recommendation letters are one of the most important aspects of any application. With more and more people applying for college, graduate school, jobs, and internships, recruiters are often faced with more qualified candidates than they can accept. Because of this, a holistic approach has been adopted by many recruiters. With a holistic approach, recruiters evaluate candidates on more than just their resumes or pure qualifications. They take into account an applicant’s personality, values, and goals in an attempt to get to know the whole applicant. This is why the recommendation letter is so important. It will help bolster your standing as a top applicant, even if you have an outstanding resume.

 

How do I Get a Good Recommendation Letter?

There are a few simple but important steps to obtain good recommendation letters.

Get to Know Your Professors, Supervisors, and Colleagues. Before you begin asking for recommendations or even applying for positions, it’s always a good decision to develop relationships with your professors, supervisors or professionals. Even if you don’t plan to ask them for recommendations, it’s good to start expanding your connections. Look for ways to get to know them better or work alongside them to further develop your professional experience.

Select Your Recommenders. The next step to getting a recommendation letter is to select several people you’d like to get recommendations from. These can be professors, fellow professionals, or mentor figures in your life. Choose your recommenders wisely. You want to select someone that you have a positive relationship with and has seen your academic work or professional ethic career. 

Ask Your Recommenders. Be sure to contact your recommenders leaving plenty of time for them to respond and to actually write the recommendation. When you contact them, don’t simply ask them for a recommendation. It is a good idea to provide some information about the position you’re applying for and even a copy of your resume so they know your qualifications. Make sure to include a link, email, or application where they can submit recommendations. Keep in mind that people you ask to write recommendations for you won’t always say yes. If they decline, thank them politely and reach out to someone else to request a recommendation..

Be of Any Assistance Possible. After confirming your recommenders, be sure to stay in touch with the recommender and provide them with any information they request. Whether it be about you or the position you’re applying for. Some may even ask to interview you, so be ready to help.

Follow Up! Usually, applications will let you know whether or not you’re recommenders have submitted their recommendations yet. If it’s nearing the deadline and they haven’t submitted their letters yet, be sure to follow up with them and ask them if they need any more information. Additionally, you may need to gently remind them about the deadline.

Say Thank You! After the application process is over, be sure to thank them for recommending you, whether or not you got accepted. A simple thank you email thanking them for their time and their efforts should suffice.

Interview Fashion: Dress for Success

By: Megan Manlunas

Congrats! You’ve finally scored that big interview for the internship of your dreams. As the big day approaches, you find yourself asking “What should I wear?” Although the recruiter can already see that you have all the qualifications as listed on your resume, first impressions are still incredibly important. The first thing an employer will notice as you walk through that door is what you are wearing. Remember that it is important to dress for success. Although different interviews may not always require a formal attire, it is best to be overdressed than it is to come under dressed.

Business Professional

  • Finance
  • Law Firm
  • Human Resources

An interview for a big financial firm or even a law firm may require interviewees to come in dressed in business attire. Women can easily wear a matching blazer and pants and it will work perfectly. I find neutral colors such as black, gray, navy and white to  work well around different outfit combinations. Women don’t have to  wear a full suit either! It’s fun to play around with different outfit combinations such as chic blouses, skirts and dresses. Not only can you mix and match with different textures, but you can also have fun accessorizing! However, it’s best to keep the jewelry minimal – simple gold rings and necklaces will always look classy and timeless. For inspiration, check out these workplace fashion blogs catered to women.

Matching suits work not only for women, but also for men! Nothing works better than a tailored suit – but don’t get me wrong you don’t have to settle for the most expensive suit for just a mere interview. Neutral colored button-down shirts paired with dress pants create a clean and professional look. Check out this article for more tips on how men should dress during an interview.

Additionally, some CUNY institutions offer interview clothes for both men and women to rent for FREE. Check it out here: John Jay and Baruch.

Business Casual

  • Technology
  • Sales
  • Trades

Not all companies will require business professional attire for an interview. Many companies – especially in the tech field – will allow you to dress more business casual. Similar to business professional, dressing business casual allows you to look professional but stay comfortable at the same time. Business casual is a great opportunity for playing around with color. Women can definitely play around more with colored skirts, blouses, tops and an informal jacket. Men can create many different outfit combinations with khakis, button-down or collared shirts, informal tie and leather shoes. For more ideas on what to wear, check this image gallery with different examples of what to wear. 

Casual

  • Start- Ups

Many times companies such as start-ups will have no dress code at work and allow you to wear “whatever”. But what does this mean? Well, this does not mean you should come in a hoodie and sweatpants and it is probably best to leave the worn out sneakers at home. Keep in mind, you are still going to work or to an interview, you still want to remain presentable. Wearing dark jeans with a simple tee shirt may suffice! You may be allowed to wear sneakers, but still try to dress respectable. The most important thing is to be comfortable with what you are wearing. Make sure you check what is appropriate to wear when there is no dress code.

It is important to do your research before an interview. You should know what vibe a company expects of its workers. Researching the consumer demographics of a company should give you an idea of how it will feel working there. If all your research does not help, sometimes the best person to ask is the recruiter themselves. They will let you know if you need to come in dress business professional or if they just want you to come in jeans.

Now that you have an idea on what you should wear, you are ready to conquer your interview! Before you go off to your interview, make sure you check Macaulay’s Interview Tips. Now go and get that internship!

 

How to Write the Perfect Cover Letter

By: Sebastian Leung

A cover letter is one of the most important parts of any job application. It allows you to give the hiring manager a little taste of who you are, a personalized letter telling them why they should hire you.

So how do you write the perfect cover letter? Here are three quick and easy tips.

 

Don’t Regurgitate Your Resume

The whole purpose of the cover letter is to explain why you are a good fit for the company and why your experiences matter. They already have your resume, so there is no need to simply recite your past experiences.

 

Write Thoughtfully

One of the biggest mistakes you can make is to write your letter in five minutes and then send it in. Don’t do this. Instead, do some research about the company and the position you’re applying for and include that in your letter. Write precisely, stating why you are the best candidate for the position. Also, do final edits before sending your letter in. Hemingway is a useful website that can help let you know if your sentences are too wordy or complex.

 

Stand Out From the Rest!

The best piece of advice is to simply stand out. Don’t write a generic cover letter, a boring, formatted paper. Instead, care less about the rules and care more about standing out to the hiring manager. Be creative! Write something memorable, something that will leave a lasting impression.

 

To view a template of a well-written cover letter, Macaulay’s booklet to writing resumes and cover letters can be found here.

Good luck with your job search!

Senior Profile: Jonathan Peñuela

When Jonathan Peñuela ’19 was a child, his father was deported to Colombia. Ever since, the two have had only a long-distance relationship with occasional visits. The Macaulay senior said that the deportation was the first time—but not the last—when he “saw gaps between my idea of justice and the law.”

That early experience sparked Jonathan’s interest in public policy. At Macaulay, he is majoring in political science with a minor in economics. He plans to go on for a master’s degree in public policy so he can work in local government on policies related to immigration, housing, criminal justice, and other areas affecting low-income communities and people of color.

Macaulay benefits helped shaped Jonathan’s interest in public service. For example, four years on the Macaulay Scholars Council gave him many opportunities for leadership including, most recently, as the council’s vice president of academic affairs.

Study abroad, supported by Macaulay Opportunities Funds, was another formative experience. In Florence, Jonathan studied the sociology and history of the Italian mafia. As is his custom in any city, including his native New York, Jonathan explored Florence by bicycle and on foot.

Most important to Jonathan was the level of mentoring he received as a Macaulay student. “It’s hard to put into words how pivotal it’s been to have an accessible advisor and personal advocate,” he said. His faculty advisor has alerted him to programs in his field, helped him apply, and put him in touch with former participants.

Thanks to this help, Jonathan won a three-year Watson Fellowship, which enabled him to work with detained immigrants in the Bronx, with housing advocates in Oakland, and with a refugee aid organization in Prague. The only downside Jonathan saw was that a broken clavicle kept him from biking around Prague.

These experiences have all solidified Jonathan’s commitment to policy work on behalf of disadvantaged populations. None of them would have happened, said Jonathan, “if I hadn’t had this unique support system” at Macaulay.

 

Macaulay’s Ted Widmer Explains How Nixon Came Back in the New York Times

The New York Times
Aug. 8, 2018

Opinion: How Nixon Came Back

Fifty years ago, the former vice president executed the greatest reversal of fortune in American political history.

By Ted Widmer

Mr. Widmer is a historian. 

On the evening of Aug. 8, 1968, Richard Nixon delivered his acceptance speech for the Republican nomination, which he had won the same day. James Reston of The Times called it “the greatest comeback since Lazarus.”

For many Americans long accustomed to seeing Mr. Nixon lose, it was disorienting to see him on the rostrum so … victorious. The old scowl was gone, the hair was a little longer and, as his handlers promised, a “New Nixon” beamed reassuringly for the cameras.

Yet it was a strange speech, alternating between genuine grace notes and darker rumblings from an American subconscious that was sullen and fearful after years of war and discord. Like tectonic plates grinding against each other, the tensions between these visions, alternatingly bright and horrific, would be difficult to resolve.

Eight years earlier, Mr. Nixon had been a famously awkward candidate who tried much too hard, sweating it out to make it to all 50 states in 1960, while John F. Kennedy casually threw spiraling footballs for the photographers of Life and Look. But a lot had changed since then. Mr. Nixon’s handlers, especially the younger ones, included a new breed of TV executive, who understood that Mr. Nixon could reinvent himself with softer lighting, better angles and fewer appearances. That, in essence, was the New Nixon. They devised a savvy strategy, outlined by one of their own, Joe McGinnis, in his classic book “The Selling of the President, 1968.” Thanks to their tutelage, he now seemed a calmer kind of statesman who spoke gnomically once a day, with plenty of time to get the footage to the networks. The spread of color TV between 1960 and 1968 helped Mr. Nixon, too; it eliminated the ghostly pallor and 5 o’clock shadow that had terrified schoolchildren in 1960. Air conditioning, another miracle, reduced the pools of perspiration that glistened when the lights burned too brightly.

Florida had already been good to Mr. Nixon, before the Republicans came to Miami. As Dwight D. Eisenhower’s running mate in 1952, he had pleaded poverty as evidence of good character during his famous “Checkers” speech. But in the intervening years, he had quietly amassed a fortune in Miami real estate, thanks to his close friend Bebe Rebozo, a well‐connected Cuban‐American. If Mr. Nixon seemed more confident, it may have had something to do with these properties, which made up almost half of his sizable wealth in 1968. His comeback had begun in Miami, in 1962, when he began to buy up parcels after losing the California governor’s race.

The Republican convention was held partly in the Fontainebleau Hotel, whose architect, Morris Lapidus, once said, “If you create a stage and it is grand, everyone who enters will play their part.” The Fontainebleau was nearly as elaborate as its royal namesake in France. TV and movie directors had been coming for years (several memorable scenes from “Goldfinger” were set at poolside). Republicans went there from all over the country, representing a party that still had many different viewpoints. One young Republican who made the trek was Hillary Rodham, not yet Clinton. In her memoir, “Living History,” she described the week as “unreal and unsettling.” In one of the Fontainebleau’s elevators, she encountered John Wayne, complaining about the food.

The coronation was scheduled for Thursday night, but Mr. Nixon had to survive robust late challenges from Nelson Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan. Like many, they were not convinced that Mr. Nixon was “the One,” as the bumper stickers and straw hats proclaimed, a little desperately. But years of hard political work — doing favors, collecting debts — paid off for the candidate as he outlasted these final challenges. Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was a robust ally, helping him to fend off Mr. Reagan on the right and refusing to let the party’s moderates anywhere near Mr. Nixon, especially when it came time for the selection of a running mate.

The surprising choice of Spiro Agnew, governor of Maryland, made no sense to most handicappers, but it pleased Mr. Thurmond and sent a signal that a new “Southern Strategy” was in the works. Mr. Agnew had received national attention for aggressively clamping down on African‐American protests as riots increasingly spun out of control in 1968. On the night of his speech, black riots erupted in Miami, killing three, but the convention in Miami Beach, separated by its causeway, seemed a world away.

A few weeks later, Democrats would fall apart more publicly in Chicago. But Miami Beach signaled a momentous shift for the Republicans as well. The nomination of Mr. Nixon and Mr. Agnew signaled a final defeat for moderate and liberal Republicans, as the party’s power base shifted South, forever.

Mr. Nixon understood that a major change had happened, and some of that drama entered his speech, one of the best he ever gave. 

He had been thinking about the speech for weeks, writing out concepts on his yellow legal pads while holed away at Montauk, on Long Island. He went for long walks on the beach — once into a fog so deep that he had trouble finding his way back. But the speech was full of taut sentences about a country that could become great again, exactly as he had.

A near‐disaster nearly prevented the speech from being given. The aide holding it, a former TV executive named Frank Shakespeare, was briefly separated from the peloton surrounding Mr. Nixon as he entered the hall. But they found each other just in time. Mr. Nixon then took the enormous stage with confidence, smiling incessantly, assuring millions of viewers that the New Nixon had arrived. The air conditioning was working. Then the speech began, sprinkling optimistic promises of greatness with dire warnings against non‐greatness. Norman Mailer, covering the convention, wondered if Nixon were simply entering random data into a cosmic Teletype machine, like the supercomputer HAL in “2001: A Space Odyssey,” saying whatever the people wanted to hear.

That was too harsh, but there was something to Mr. Mailer’s observation that it was a strangely put‐together speech. For long sections, he promised ever‐expanding vistas of an air‐conditioned paradise, in which all Americans treated each other decently. In one stretch, he almost seemed to channel the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., repeating “I see an America” much as Dr. King had chanted “I have a dream.”

But in other sections of the speech, the old 5 o’clock shadow grew back. Crime was out of control in America, and Mr. Nixon promised to restore “law and order.” The United States had paid too much for its alliances; it was time for the allies to step up and pay “their fair share.” He promised that he would “stop pouring billions of dollars into programs that have failed,” including welfare. Somehow, that would reduce crime.

In short, less taxes, more greatness. Over and over, he spoke to the “forgotten Americans,” assuring them that greatness was right around the corner:

America is a great nation … And America is great because her people are great … America is a great nation … And it is time we started to act like a great nation around the world … We are a great nation … And we must never forget how we became great … We make great history tonight.

In a way, he did. The speech was a hit and helped propel Mr. Nixon to victory in November. One section, near the end, described a child listening to a train in the distance, forming “dreams of faraway places where he’d like to go.” That image resonated when the audience slowly realized he was talking about himself, growing up in straitened circumstances, along a different coast. It was about as personal a moment as Mr. Nixon ever offered.

He was buoyed by the speech and stayed up late with his advisers, excited. The final lines of the speech had promised to end “the long dark night” and look out over a new dawn. That also seemed to be his plan for the evening. He nearly made it, but fell asleep around 4 a.m., muttering imprecations against The New York Times that could not be printed in his least favorite newspaper.

In his speech, Mr. Nixon looked ahead, to the 21st century, and thought he might be inaugurating a new era of post‐Democratic ascendancy. That did not quite happen, but the speech’s themes have proven durable. Both Democrats and Republicans have tried to unite the country since then; most have failed. Some, like Mr. Reagan, veered toward the sunny side of Mr. Nixon’s rhetoric. Others, like Donald Trump, have headed into the darkness. Some aspects of Mr. Nixon’s speech even sound quaint today — he included Mexicans and African‐Americans in his idealized version of the country and bore no hostility to the foreign‐born. The speech mentioned building bridges, not walls. But in the end, his hatreds proved more powerful than his tautological vision of a country seeking greatness, simply by remembering that it was once great.

As history now knows, more clearly than in 1968, there were misdeeds large and small in the era that was beginning on that August evening. Throughout Mr. Nixon’s presidency, as Newsday reported in some hard‐hitting journalism of the time, he gave constant favors to the Florida realtors who had helped to make him rich, bending the rules whenever he thought he could get away with it. That proved to be a slippery slope. He was lounging in a pool in South Florida with Mr. Rebozo when he first heard the news there had been a clumsy break‐in at the Watergate apartment complex. Mr. Rebozo recalled, “We laughed and forgot about it.”

Mr. Nixon’s speeches tend not to be included in speech anthologies. But it would be difficult to find a richer document of the times. With this skillful address, he achieved his political goals and articulated an important new vision for the country, palpably different from the one Franklin D. Roosevelt had unveiled at Chicago in 1932. But in the end, like most politicians, he promised more than he could deliver. Worse, he sowed the seeds for future confusion by trying to take America back to a perfect place where it had never even been.

Ted Widmer is a historian, is professor and director of the Humanities Lab at the Macaulay Honors College of the City University of New York. He edited a collection of speeches for the Library of America.