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Thank you gift for professor
I've had a professor help me get accepted into a mater's program. It's a long complicated story, but basically I wanted to transfer from one program to another, and it was a bureaucratic nightmare and a general pain in the ass, for the both of us I'm sure. Basically she's helped me out a lot and I'd like to show her I appreciate it.
But I don't know what would be an appropriate thing to get. Like at all. I've never gotten anything for a professor, and this is just new territory for me.
I'd like to stray away from gift cards because they're kinda lame and I don't know where she shops anyway.
Thanks in advance!
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This is especially true if she is a faculty member in your new program and it might look like you're trying to buy her influence.
Be careful about this, you might be putting her into an awkward situation.
A well written thank you note its likely your best course of action.
Totally had not occurred to me, so thank you for pointing that out.
I suppose then that this would be more appropriate come graduation time? Or just not at all ever?
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Yeah, no gift. But a card, definitely.
Even if you don't want to do anything like that, a thank-you note is a very good idea.
- A thank you note and an offer to write a letter of reference in the future. Professors are often up for fellowships, teaching awards, etc, many of which request letters of rec from previous students.
- I second the suggestion of mugs / simple gifts, by @ceres
- Bake her cookies, or brownies, or muffins, or something else homemade. I've made professors brownies before and they were very appreciated for a mid-research snack.
I got my architecture professor a mug from when I went out to a Frank Lloyd Wright built house here in Oregon. He was a great professor. A pain in the ass and really ambiguous about projects, but a great professor. I don't think anyone could see a mug as some sort of bribe or kickback.
Found out the following year that he was leaving, so everyone chipped in to get him a fancy conductor's baton. Turns out he wasn't leaving again, more awkwardness ensued. Luckily the trend didn't continue (he's still there- would have amassed an awkwardly large pile of gifts by now!)
I agree that, especially if you can't think of something that really fits them (ties in to their field or fits in well with what you know of them), you could do a lot worse than a nice, heartfelt letter. Especially going to a teacher- someone who essentially got into the field of changing lives- getting feedback that they made such an impact can be pretty much the best thing.
I'm not saying it doesn't matter, but getting a consumable for someone is both smart (because it will be consumed) and my impression is that it's not so much a gift of "do this for me" but "thank you, let's celebrate."
Plus a bottle of wine won't necessarily broadcast its price.