Is It Unprofessional for a College Professor to Breastfeed During Class?

One morning, American University anthropology professor Adrienne Pine found her baby daughter sick with a fever. Consequently, she was unable to leave the child at day care. It was the first day of the semester and Pine didn't want to miss class. So she brought the baby to class and, at one point during her lecture, she breastfed the child. Some students, including freshman Jake Carias, thought this was unprofessional conduct:

“I found it unprofessional,” he said. “I was kind of appalled.”

Carias fired off a tweet: “midway through class breast feeding time.” He also posted a message on his Facebook page. He said he later dropped the class.

Now, the Northwest Washington campus is abuzz.

At the Tavern, a dining room just off the central quad, Jenna Wasserman, 18, a freshman from New Jersey, said she has heard two opinions from students: that breast-feeding “is very much natural,” and that doing so in class is “kind of unprofessional.” Wasserman said she leans toward the latter view. “There were alternatives,” she said.

In a response published in Counterpunch, Dr. Pine wrote:

So here’s the story, internet: I fed my sick baby during feminist anthropology class without disrupting the lecture so as to not have to cancel the first day of class. I doubt anyone saw my nipple, because I’m pretty good at covering it. But if they did, they now know that I too, a university professor, like them, have nipples. Or at least that I have one.

Link -via Slate | Photo: American University 

Was it unprofessional for Dr. Pine to breastfeed her child during class?



Changing a baby diaper would not be the right thing to do in class. Feeding the baby strained beets would not be the right thing to do in class. Bathing the baby would not be the right thing to do in class.

It's not child care, but a job. Do the job, hire someone for childcare.
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There's nothing wrong with breastfeeding, but to do so in the classroom is definitely unprofessional. You simply shouldn't be caring for an infant in the middle of a lecture. Not only is it not part of your job, but it breaks your connection with the audience for the duration of the lecture, interfering with your work (professional speaking 101). She didn't have to cancel class, she could have just called a 10-15 minute break to attend to the child - this is college, your students are adults, they'll understand having to attend to a personal matter for a minute.

Considering the context of the class and her excuses I have to question whether the professor was actually making a personal statement with her conduct more than anything, but not knowing her I can't make that call.
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As a mother, who breast fed, I will defend any woman's right to breast feed. However, this was not an appropriate setting. If her child was sick, she should have either canceled class or found a sitter. In addition to the feeding, what the child was ill with could have been spread to others in the room in theory. That being said, I DO think that given the topic, I would have expected there to be no problem. Especially if she was covered so that her breast wasn't fully exposed.
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The wrong question is being asked. Breastfeeding is not the issue. It only took a fraction of total class time. How many college students haven't seen bare breasts? And these were being used for their primary purpose, not in a lewd or provocative way. Covering up should be optional and for the modesty of the mother and not for bystanders puritanical beliefs.
Should she have brought a sick child to class? I say no, but it isn't deserving of this much attention.
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This is very unprofessional. She could have ended the class early. It would have been unprofessional for her to sit there eating an entire meal in front of the class. "Oh hey, let me just finish my scrambled eggs and bacon and then we can talk about Feminist Ryan Gosling and the impact he's had on women's rights in salary increases in the workforce."
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Plus, I hear there are these new-fangled things called breast pumps, if she really really really had to feed the baby at that exact moment during class. I'm a woman and I just don't see the need for a woman to breastfeed in public when there are other options. To me, it's crap psychology some factions try to use in defense of their need to show off, be rebellious, say "fuck the man." I don't know the reason, but it's silly and I'm all for women's rights.
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I agree with @dev, @trishlovesdolphins & @Grey Street Girl : I have no problem with a woman doing what is natural.

But she should have called a break, gotten a friend with some formula, or just cancelled the damn class.

And bringing a sick baby in was not a great idea. Infants' immune systems are excruciatingly fragile,

and college students are all dirty, unwashed, syphilitic Commie-bastard Hipster mud-wrestlers with their 80's clothes and grammaw shorts; -so intersecting the two was not smart.
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@Alex: You do realize that breast milk is not at all like excrement, right??

I had a professor in the late '90s who occasionally had to nurse her infant in class. It was really not a big deal and in no way disruptive. I wonder whether the people complaining how "unprofessional" this was have actually ever been in a room while a mom nursed her baby? In most cases, the act doesn't expose much, and it doesn't require the mom to divert her attention from other tasks.
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I think she just made the best of a bad situation: baby sick, child-care won't take care of it, first day of class... I think CANCELING the class would have been unprofessional!
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She acted unprofessionally because she accepted a major distraction--childcare--to prevent her from giving her full attention to her students.

The issue is not breastfeeding. Breastfeeding in public is fine. It's about being fully on-task for the service her students paid for.
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I'm with most of you here. The question should not be about breastfeeding. Most people don't and shouldn't be put off by it, especially when covered. The woman should not be bringing a baby into class at all. You can't tell a baby to "behave". They aren't capable of it. What if the baby just cried for half the class? AND, if she can, than the students can. That'd just be chaos.

Any working mother should have a contingency plan for just such a situation. Most jobs would just say "no way" and that would be the end of it. What sitter wouldn't take a baby for one hour for a 20? Thus, we are left with the obvious conclusion: The professor was making a statement. I guess in her particular class, that might have been appropriate. It would have made a great subject of discussion during the following class. "How many of you were offended by my actions last class and why?"...
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It is more unprofessional for a student to tweet in class then it is for a woman to breast-feed anywhere. And to top it off this was Feminist Anthropology at a Private Liberal Arts college! Were all the students dressed professionally? Did adult men wear shorts? Where there people in sweats? Professionalism is a subjective term, and chances are there might be a lecture,film or what-have-you that was going to deal with motherhood so the class got a very realistic look into the pressures of child-rearing and being a professional women.
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voter thingy is broken.

Inappropriate and unprofessional and clearly done only for the shock value. Saying "excuse me" and stepping into somewhere private would have only taken a few minutes. But instead, she chose to detract from learning, create controversy, and make her students feel uncomfortable just to make a point.
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