Birds, Bees, and Breastfeeding
November 30, 2007 by Heidi Green | one question or comment
And so it is with interest that I read Hila Spear’s recent article about college students’ recollection of their middle and high school breastfeeding education and their subsequent attitudes about breastfeeding.
A Little BackgroundMs. Spear surveyed male and female students enrolled in any of three intro-level courses at
About 86% of the nearly 600 students chose to participate; 515 surveys were collected. The majority of survey respondents (65%) were female. About 55% of respondents had attended public school, although nearly 11% had been home schooled for middle school and 8% for high school, too. The vast majority of respondents were Caucasian (78%), and most were freshman (71%). Nearly one-third (31%) were nursing majors.
Although about 10% were uncertain how they were fed as infants, about 49% reported having been breastfed and another 28% reported having been breast- and formula-fed. Only about 13% had received formula alone.
Breastfeeding EducationOnly about 37% of the participants reported having been taught breastfeeding information in high school, and just about 11% said they were taught about it in middle school. Most (between 55% and 60%) reported that it was taught in their health and family life class.
Breastfeeding Attitudes
Many female students also said they planned to breastfeed (86%) and male students to encourage breastfeeding (86%). In fact, only 3-4% of respondents said they would not breastfeed or encourage breastfeeding.
In light of this, it seems surprising that over two-thirds (68%) indicated that public breastfeeding was “not acceptable,” and that even more (78%) said it was an “intimate act” that should take place “in private.”
What Does This Mean?College is generally accepted as being a time of heightened sexual awareness and powerful peer pressure. Breasts are sexual parts that should be kept under cover (although they may be flashed during a Girls Gone Wild moment). For this reason, I don’t think it is any surprise that so many college students felt that feeding from the breasts should be a private act. This is probably also why they felt it was an inappropriate topic for middle-school students.
I wish we could fast-forward about ten or fifteen years and conduct a follow-up survey with these same students. Their opinion about how “private,” “intimate” and, really, isolated breastfeeding should be may change once they and/or their friends have (and, hopefully, breastfeed) their children. Their opinion about the topic’s appropriateness for middle-school students may change once they see their children “breastfeed” their baby dolls or hear them talk about how other mammals feed their babies!
The findings of this study are probably not representative of the broader community (all participants had gone on to education beyond high school) or even of all college/university students (nearly half were majoring in a health care field, students self-selected to participate in the study). Still, the results do highlight that there is a place for breastfeeding education in the standard school curriculum—or, at least, there should be.
As parents, let’s see what we can do to make sure that our children hear about the many health benefits of breastfeeding not only outside the classroom, but inside it, too.









Another thing to take into consideration is that Liberty University was founded by Jerry Falwell and is a very fundamentalist Christian, right-wing institution. The students who self-select to attend are indeed overwhelmingly Caucasian and may also have unusually sensitive reactions to any display of what might be considered “sexual” behavior (anything that involves the woman’s breast) in public.