NEW HAVEN, Conn.
Yale University is moving forward with plans to build two residential colleges, an expansion that could create the largest increase in the student body since the Ivy League college began admitting women in 1969.
Yale President Richard Levin sent a statement to faculty and students this week citing the benefits of the proposal after a study group completed a one-year evaluation.
He said he will suggest at a board meeting this week that officials develop a budget and a fundraising plan to seek gifts to help pay for the expansion before he seeks final approval of the project in June from the university’s board of trustees.
“I believe that it is time to use our augmented resources to prepare a larger number of the most talented and promising students of all backgrounds for leadership and service,” Levin wrote.
Yale’s endowment has grown rapidly in recent years and is now more than $22 billion.
The new colleges would allow Yale to ease crowding and increase its undergraduate enrollment to about 6,000 students, up 12 to 13 percent from 5,300. Faculty would be added, Levin said.