Academic Cover Letters
The cover letter is a single spaced, two-page introductory document that creates a narrative for your application package. It introduces the search committee to your:
- Enthusiasm for the position and your expected availability (e.g., expected defense date)
- Research
- Teaching and teaching assistantships
- Service
- Other relevant experience (internships, previous professional experience, etc.)
- Fit (why you are the right person for the position, understanding of campus culture and values, etc.)
Because no cover letter can convey all this information appropriately in only two pages, you will need to tailor your letter depending on the department, the university, the requirements specified in the job call, your application package, etc.
Keep in mind, the cover letter should not directly lift content from other supporting material. For example, if a job call also asks for a Teaching Statement or Philosophy, you should not feel pressure to condense all of that content into a paragraph. Rather use the cover letter to illustrate how your teaching fits into your scholarly identity. Consider how it is informed by your research, commitment to equity and inclusion, etc.
Consider:
- How the job call is written, which responsibilities are presented and in what order – is teaching prioritized over research?
- What application documents are requested – is there something not requested that you could elaborate on in the cover letter?
- What student populations would you engage with as a faculty member in the department – undergraduate? graduate? both?
- Is the institution mission-driven – how does that impact your professional narrative?
The cover letter could include a combination of the following paragraphs:
Opening Paragraph
Just like articles and dissertations have a central “thesis” or research question, this paragraph gives the letter’s thesis statement, clarifying how your mix of experience makes you the best candidate for the job. This paragraph lists the basics of the cover letter:
- Introduce yourself
- Explain your interest in the position and institution
- Basic rundown of who you are as a scholar in relation to the role
Body Paragraphs
Research
This content could address your research project(s), areas of interest, methodological training, and future research agendas. Think about how you would fit into the department and the expertise you would provide. If you are applying to a research institution, your research paragraphs should come first.
You will want to include some of the following points:
- Your current research project (dissertation)
- Potential future projects (dissertation to book, next research project, etc.)
- Impact of your project(s) (publications, conference or poster presentations, public lectures, etc.)
- Other achievements (grants and funding won, awards earned, public-facing work, etc.)
- Potential collaborations within the department and/or across the institution, depending on the interdisciplinary nature of the position.
Teaching
This content discusses your teaching experience, whether as an instructor of record or a TA, your pedagogical training, and any mentoring/advising. If the job is teaching-focused, this should be where you start. Use this space to introduce how your teaching is a part of who you are as a scholar.
You will want to include some of the following points:
- Your approach to teaching
- Other ways you have engaged with and/or mentored students (office hours, summer research opportunities, etc.)
- Expertise in relation to courses you are prepared to teach
Service
This content communicates how you contribute to the collegial nature of the institution or department to which you are applying. It might range from a full paragraph to a few sentences supplementing your research or teaching paragraphs.
You can pull from:
- Graduate Assistantships or other service you have done within your department (e.g., serving on committees), the institution, or professional organizations
- Conference volunteering and service
- Search committee participation
- Other volunteer work and community involvement
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
This content discusses how your current and future experiences consider diversity, equity, inclusivity, and accessibility. Commitment to DEI can be shown through:
- Research areas, pedagogical applications, or service in and outside of institutions
- Where you align with the mission statement of the institution and/or department
- How you can contribute to the student population or wider community
These considerations are communicated most seamlessly not as stand-alone paragraphs, but woven into your document as a whole.
Closing Paragraph
Think back to your thesis statement and reinforce your excitement about the role. Keep it short and to the point – thank them for their time and consideration, ending with a professional sign off and full name.
General Tips Before Submission
- Prior to submitting, double check that the cover letter is signed and saved as a PDF (preferably on Northwestern letterhead).
- As with all application documents, make sure to have multiple eyes on the content before submitting it to the hiring committee.
- Take advantage of the support Northwestern provides from the Graduate Writing Place and Northwestern Career Advancement.
- Postdocs can make appointments for individualized feedback with the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs.