
It was only a matter of time before man’s best friend got accepted into Yale Law. Ok, maybe he doesn’t actually go there, but therapy dog Monty is definitely a Yalie. This loveable 21 pound brown border terrier mix is on loan via the Yale Law library for a three-day pilot pet therapy program.
Students at the country’s top rated law school face a lot of stress and pressure, and it is Monty’s job to help relieve some of that tension, and maybe even lower blood pressure as well. Next week, students who signed up can spend time with the therapy dog, who actually belongs to librarian Julian Aiken. According to law librarian Blair Kauffman, “It is well documented that visits from therapy dogs have resulted in increased happiness, calmness and overall emotional well-being.” Therapy dogs have been used at Tufts University, UC San Diego, and Oberlin College to help students deal with the stress of exams, and they are a fixture in hospitals, schools, nursing homes, and even disaster recovery sites.
For those lucky 6.7 percent of applicants that get accepted into Yale Law, pressure is a constant part of life. They have to live up to alumni which includes presidents and Supreme Court judges, and they have a $48,000 tuition bill to worry about. Rajita Sinha, a psychologist and professor of psychiatry at Yale, welcomes the move, saying “students…need to learn ways of handling it [stress] and need help at different points in the semester.”
If all goes well with Monty and his law students, the program could turn into a permanent fixture on campus. We’re pretty sure Monty is handling the pressures of the Ivy League with aplomb. And hopefully a cute sweatshirt to keep him warm in the cold New Haven spring.



