University of California, Davis: Medical Student Put on Probation for Complaining About Email Monitoring

On July 19, 2010, incoming first-year University of California, Davis, School of Medicine student Curtis Allumbaugh sent an email to his class listserv about a party he was organizing. After a second-year student who had been assigned to monitor the listserv criticized his email's "heavy emphasis on alcohol," Allumbaugh told the student she was being a "busy body" and to mind her own business. As a result of this exchange, Allumbaugh was cited for "failing to demonstrate the highest standards of civility and decency to all," and in November 2010 was placed on permanent academic probation. Following two letters from FIRE, UC Davis removed Allumbaugh's probation, though students continue to face the threat of academic discipline for violating the university's Principles of Community. 

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  • "Victory: Probation Dropped for UC Davis Med Student; Unconstitutional ‘Civility’ Policy Remains," February 29, 2012: The University of California, Davis School of Medicine has removed a student from probation after punishing him for telling a fellow student to stop monitoring the mailing list for his entering class. The School of Medicine conflated Curtis Allumbaugh's personal emails with professional practice when it invoked the UC Davis Principles of Community to punish his lack of "courtesy," then added insult to injury when it threatened to put any med student who violated the Principles of Community on academic probation. Allumbaugh came to FIRE for help.