EducationJanuary 25, 2026

Thinking About Law School: Rising Interest, Loans, and AI

Key Vocabulary

surge/sɜːrdʒ/
a sudden large increase
"There was a surge in applications this year."
repayment/rɪˈpeɪmənt/
the process of paying back money borrowed
"Repayment terms affect a student's monthly budget."
automation/ˌɔːtəˈmeɪʃən/
use of machines or software to do tasks without people
"Automation can speed up routine legal work."
recoup/rɪˈkuːp/
to get back money that was spent
"Graduates may take years to recoup tuition costs."
operational/ˌɒpəˈreɪʃənəl/
relating to the normal work or activities of an organization
"Operational changes led to staff reorganizations."

Listening

Thinking About Law School: Rising Interest, Loans, and AI

Interest in legal education has surged in a way that has surprised many admissions professionals, and the volume of applicants has climbed sharply: recent LSAC counts show the number of people applying is roughly 52.7% higher than two years ago, while applications submitted are over 62% higher. Test registrations and first‑time LSAT takers have also risen, and law schools are seeing broader geographic and racial diversity in the applicant pool. Because admissions offices receive more files, schools are changing how they review candidates and manage offers.

At the same time, federal student loan rules are being tightened, with new borrowing limits and changes that will affect graduate and professional students starting in 2026; these rules will reduce the amount some students can borrow and alter repayment options. Universities and prospective students therefore face a different financing landscape, which may push some applicants to seek more grants, work before study, or consider alternative careers. The financial calculus that once made a law degree a predictable investment is becoming more complex.

Meanwhile, advances in artificial intelligence are reshaping legal work: major firms have cited AI and operational shifts when reducing business‑services roles, and surveys show growing individual use of generative tools for drafting and research, even as firm‑wide policies remain cautious. As routine tasks are automated and training models evolve, the shape of entry‑level legal work may change substantially, potentially altering the traditional path from junior associate to partner. If you are weighing law school now, consider how technology will affect the skills you need, the types of early work you will do, and how long it may take to recoup tuition.

270 words

Quiz

1. By how much are applications submitted higher than two years ago?
2. What do surveys show growing individual use of?
3. What may applicants seek as a result of the changing financing landscape?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think a change in loan rules would change your study plans? How?

2

Have you used an AI tool at work or school? What was your experience?

3

What skills do you think new lawyers will need in the next five years?

4

Would you prefer to work for a firm that uses AI widely? Why or why not?

5

How long would you expect to take to recoup the cost of a professional degree?

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