The tough climate for legal education has claimed another victim.

Valparaiso University, a private university in Northwest Indiana, said Thursday its board of directors voted to stop enrolling new law school students, meaning the law school will likely be wound down over the next few years.

Enrollment has plummeted at Valparaiso University Law School, once a well-respected regional school. This year’s incoming class had just 29 full-time students, down from 206 in 2013.

The news follows a similar move in April by the board of Whittier College in Southern California to stop admitting new students to Whittier Law School. Both are among some 200 nationally accredited law schools in the country, a number that many industry watchers say is unsustainable in the long term.

The legal profession suffered after the last economic downturn, resulting in fewer people seeking out a law degree and difficulty for those who did graduate to find well-paying law jobs. Law schools haven’t recovered from the changing market forces, and many graduates are saddled with six-figure debt loads.