SWLAW Blog | Future Students
May 20, 2026
National Jurist Spotlights Micheal Rubio and Southwestern鈥檚 Online J.D. Program
By the time Micheal Rubio opens his laptop and begins his Southwestern Law coursework each evening, he鈥檚 already spent the day leading behavioral health and housing programs for vulnerable populations across Los Angeles County.
Rubio, a 1L in Southwestern鈥檚 Online J.D. Program and the Director of Outpatient and Homeless Services at the Los Angeles Centers for Alcohol and Drug Abuse in East Los Angeles, is featured in a recent National Jurist article examining what online legal education looks like in practice. As a working professional, first-generation law student, and community advocate, he demonstrates how Southwestern allows students to fit law school into their lives. 鈥淚 work an 8-to-5 Monday through Friday,鈥 Rubio told National Jurist. 鈥淭hen I go home, handle family responsibilities and start my schoolwork. I鈥檓 doing school every day.鈥
The article places Rubio鈥檚 story within a broader look at the growth of online and hybrid J.D. programs nationwide. For Southwestern, the feature also points to the defining strengths of its online model: a largely asynchronous, ABA-accredited program available in both full-time and part-time formats, designed for students whose lives require structured autonomy without sacrificing rigor, faculty access, or connection to the law school community.
For Rubio, that freedom is not simply a matter of convenience. It allows him to pursue a legal education while continuing the work that brought him to law school in the first place. Having grown up in foster care and experienced the justice system firsthand, Rubio is pursuing a law degree to strengthen his ability to advocate for underserved communities.
He described the experience as demanding, personal, and supported. 鈥淎ll of the faculty really take the time to get to know us,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ven though it鈥檚 an asynchronous learning environment, we still have office hours every week, opportunities to meet with teaching assistants and practice exercises that help prepare us for exams.鈥
Though he studies online, Rubio remains connected to campus life. He uses the library on weekends and was recently elected as a first-year representative for the Student Bar Association and several student organizations.
鈥淭his is one of the hardest things I have ever done,鈥 Rubio told National Jurist. 鈥淏ut it will also be one of the most worthwhile.鈥