Yale had a record-high number of applicants despite a year of tense and emotional student protests
The school received 31,439 applications, surpassing the 31,000 marker for the first time in the school's history. There was also a 10% uptick in applications for African-Americans, according to the YDN.
At least one student attributed the record number of applications to the protests that erupted over allegations of systemic racism on the New Haven, Connecticut campus.
"I think that students of color and students who are on the liberal side of the spectrum saw the inherent problems on campus and the demonstrations that students at Yale underwent and saw it as a sign that Yale was a place that encouraged student activism and that students were proactive about creating an environment where they could thrive and feel at home," Yale freshman Isaac Scobey-Thal told the YDN.
Yale's impressive application numbers stand in direct contrast with those at the University of Missouri, which has reported a decrease in student applications following its own fall semester with racial protests.
Administrators have cited the racial protests that engulfed the school in the fall as a partial reason for the declines.
"While we don't have any clear data, we know that the events this past fall have had an impact, and we are answering any questions that parents and students have about those events," Director of Admissions Chuck May wrote in an email, according to the Missourian.
Racial tension on the Columbia, Missouri, campus erupted last September and quickly accelerated after multiple incidents of hate speech targeted at minority students.