This study looks carefully at which law school faculties are using ChatGPT in their work and what they are using it for. The study helps its readers to answer questions such as: How are law school faculties benefiting from the use of ChatGPT? What are their reservations about its use? What advice do they offer to their peers? How do they expect it to impact law school operations, legal scholarships and teachings? What has been the impact to date?
Just a few of this 38-page report’s many findings are that:
- 23.1% of assistant and associate professors are currently using ChatGPT in their research, teachings or scholarships.
- 12.5% of faculty aged 50-59 are using ChatGPT to enhance their legal information retrieval and research.
- 7.32% of full professors thought that ChatGPT would have a revolutionary impact on their field.
- In general, faculty working at public colleges were more likely than those working at private colleges to say that their work had benefited from the use of ChatGPT.
Data in the report was derived from a survey drawing 104 responses from 56 law schools in the USA; it was conducted from April 10 to June 7, 2023. Data is broken down by variables related to the institutional affiliation of the survey participants (enrollment size, public/private status/ranking) law schools, as well as personal characteristics such as age and gender.
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INSTITUTIONAL AFFILIATIONS OF THE SURVEY PARTICIPANT