Academic Cover Letters
Academic Cover Letters
Academic Cover Letters
Academic Positions
The purpose of a cover letter is to introduce yourself and to demonstrate the fit between your
background and the advertised position.
THE BASICS
A cover letter must accompany and be tailored to any application you submit. STEM letters
should not exceed one page. Humanities and social sciences letters may extend up to two
pages. Check with faculty in your department.
Address to the individual named in the job posting, or with Dear Members of the
Search Committee.
Articulate your fit and focus on potential contributions to this institutionnot why you
need or want the job.
Answer any questions they might have. For most graduate students and postdocs,
important questions include: When will you complete your degree? or When are
you available?
TIPS
Refer to the specific position for which you are applying and how you learned about
the position or institution.
Briefly, but specifically, explain why you are interested in the job and institution,
beyond regurgitating the mission statement).
Include a thesis statement outlining the reasons why you are applying for this job and
what makes you an excellent candidate.
Provide brief, specific examples to demonstrate your skills and experiencedo not
to simply repeat your CV.
For major research institutions: Stress interest in conducting research and elaborate
on current research topics. What will you do for them? This is an opportunity to
mention potential collaborations.
Conclusion
Reinforce your interest and enthusiasm.
Indicate what you would like to see as next steps. For example, state that you look
forward to speaking with the search committee.
End with a professional closing such as Kind Regards or Sincerely, and your full
name.
grad.illinois.edu/CareerDevelopment
grad.illinois.edu/CareerDevelopment
RACHEL GREEN
I believe that clear, open communication with students is a key element in helping them learn. Looking back
at my own learning experience as a student at a liberal arts college, I greatly value the supportive and caring
environment that a college like Coe provides between professors and students. In my prospective career as a
professor at this institution, I look forward to working in a collaborative learning and teaching environment
with both faculty and students, where I can develop courses incorporating innovative teaching techniques
and the most recent theories and research through an interdisciplinary approach. I am excited at the
prospect of teaching Spanish 315 or Spanish 380 and I feel that I could contribute to a number of the other
courses at both the introductory and intermediate level. I would also welcome the opportunity to develop
new courses according to departmental needs.
In my opinion, out-of-the-classroom education is the perfect complement to classroom learning and a way
to help students learn a foreign language and become better citizens of the world. Drawing from my own
experience as a study abroad student, I would be very interested in creating new study abroad courses or
grad.illinois.edu/CareerDevelopment
becoming involved in any of the existing programs in Spain, Dominican Republic, Mexico, etc. that the
Foreign Languages Department offers at Coe. I would also enjoy participating in the service learning
programs where students work with the Spanish speaking community of Linn County.
As a scholar in Peninsular Spanish literature and culture, I believe teaching and research should go hand in
hand. When teaching literature and culture courses, I like to incorporate my own research on class and
gender representation by providing additional materials that complement regular class content. Currently,
my interdisciplinary research brings together historic, economic and geographic perspectives to explore the
representation of female labor in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century novels, short novels and
zarzuelasSpanish operettasin Spain. I propose that the narration of female work provides new insights
into the ideological and material construction of the text itself. My project reveals that Costumbrismo,
Realism, Modernism and Avant-Garde use class as the main social category to determine fictional urban
working womens gender and work identities and their (un)successful trajectory in the narrative. I contend
that in these texts, class converges with gender in conflicting ways in the process of narrative signification,
producing a multiplicity of contradictory meanings that expose turn-of-the-century bourgeois anxieties. I
locate these rhetorical conceptualizations of urban female work as part of a historical moment in Spain
when major social and economic transformations increased middle-class anxieties about national instability.
I have already begun to publish findings from my dissertation. My article Modern Castiza Landscapes:
Working Women in Zarzuela has been accepted for publication pending minor revisions by the Bulletin of
Spanish Studies. I will also present a paper on female cabaret singers sexuality in zarzuelas and short novels at
the MLA convention this January.
After I finish my dissertation and publish it as a monograph, I plan to study the relationship between class,
race and gender in current cultural manifestations in Spain. In this second project, I aim to explore how
female peripheral characterssuch as the prostitute, immigrant, or lesbiannegotiate and articulate
notions of home and desire in the context of modern globalization in Spanish films and novels.
I am very excited about the opportunity of joining Coe College, and I am enclosing my curriculum vitae and
a sample of scholarly work. Letters of reference will arrive under a separate cover for your consideration. I
will gladly provide any other supporting materials upon request. I will be attending the MLA convention in
Los Angeles this January, and would be glad to meet you there at your convenience. Thank you for your
consideration, and I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Sincerely,
Rachel Green
grad.illinois.edu/CareerDevelopment