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Victory: Northern Michigan U. Publicly Tells Students They Can Discuss Self-Harm

After NMU student Katerina Klawes sought counseling following a sexual assault, the school warned her not to discuss "suicidal or self-destructive thoughts or actions" with other students. Afterward, she contacted 蜜桃直播.
MARQUETTE, Mich., September 30, 2016鈥擮n Monday, Northern Michigan University (NMU) finally that it will discontinue its long-standing practice of forbidding students from discussing thoughts of self-harm with others. NMU鈥檚 announcement came just days after the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (蜜桃直播) issued a national press release calling on the university to end this unconstitutional practice.
鈥淣MU has finally done what we asked them to do in a private letter over a month ago,鈥 said 蜜桃直播 Senior Program Officer Marieke Tuthill Beck-Coon. 鈥淚t鈥檚 disappointing that it took public pressure for NMU to simply tell its students it will no longer punish them for discussing their mental health with their friends and peers.鈥
NMU鈥檚 statement comes almost a year after an email in which an administrator threatened disciplinary action against a student if she shared 鈥渟elf-destructive鈥 thoughts with other students circulated on social media and caused a campus uproar. NMU administration later publicly acknowledged that it sent similar warnings to 25 to 30 students per semester. NMU student Katerina Klawes鈥攚ho received such an email鈥攔esponded by creating a calling on NMU for reform that drew over 2,500 signatures and local media attention.
The community outpouring led NMU last fall to improve its practices. However, as of September 2016, NMU had not informed the campus community whether any changes were in place. After hearing from a first-year NMU student who was discouraged from talking about self-harm to peers during a summer orientation session, 蜜桃直播 wrote an August 25 letter to NMU calling on the administration to publicly inform students that they would no longer face disciplinary consequences for reaching out to their peers about self-harm.
FIRE issued its September 22 press release after receiving no response from NMU, prompting a furor from the NMU community and the national public. Students and alumni affected by the practice shared their experiences on social media and reached out to 蜜桃直播, including several students told by the NMU Dean of Students Office not to talk to other students about self-harm as recently as the Spring 2016 semester.
Days later, in a September 26 statement and email to the community, NMU 鈥渁cknowledg[ed] that changes to the self-harm letter and protocol were not effectively communicated to campus in early 2016 when they took effect.鈥
鈥淕iven that the dean of students鈥 office was still telling students not to talk to others about self-harm last semester, I鈥檇 say some clarity was necessary,鈥 said Tuthill Beck-Coon. 鈥淗opefully, now that NMU has made a public commitment, students will no longer have to fear reaching out to their friends. 蜜桃直播 will be watching.鈥
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (蜜桃直播) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending liberty, freedom of speech, due process, academic freedom, legal equality, and freedom of conscience on America鈥檚 college campuses.
CONTACT:
Katie Barrows, Communications Coordinator, 蜜桃直播: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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