The nation’s top 14 law schools, according to U.S. News & World Report, saw larger changes to the racial and ethnic makeup of their 1L classes this fall than most law schools approved by the American Bar Association, according to data released by the ABA this week.

The population of 39,684 first-year enrollees within the ABA’s cohort of 196 approved law schools saw a decline in proportional representation of Black or African men by 0.3 percentage points, as well as American Indian men declining by 0.3 points, white men by 0.6 points and white women by 0.8 points.