At some point though, depending on where it's at, it does become a distraction. Perhaps in this case the blame shouldn't be so much on the teacher than rather on society in general and how this country has some sort of apprehension to nudity in general where an exposed breast have folks going crazy.
But as it stands now, it is what it is. The teacher knew it would be a distraction (I can't see why she wouldn't) and yet still proceeded to do it. The point of the classroom is not to have the students distracted. You can go back and say, well that's their problem, but as I illustrated in the above paragraph, it's really society's problem, one that doesn't seem to be going away anytime time.
Yeah, I'm not sure why breastfeeding, which doesn't even involve nudity, is so scary or "appalling" (the word one of the male students used) or inappropriate to society. It's just feeding. That's it. And I'll go further and say yes, exposed breasts are nothing to be in an uproar about (remember, say, Ms Jackson's nipple slip during the halftime show? you'd think they had an orgy on live TV or something, the reaction was so over the top :what: ), nor is nudity in general.
So I agree with you that the blame definitely belongs on societal...what? norms? Mores? That's the root of it, sure. But if we say "well, she shouldn't have done it because she knew that society frowns on it", then we are saying that society's warped attitude is okay, and that a nursing mother is the one that has to go out of her way to do something that is neither immoral nor illegal, something that people do millions of times a day - feed a baby.
And if we cry about it on twitter, report it to the school newspaper, decide to make an issue about it BY publishing a story in the paper, then this problem society has definitely wont go anywhere soon.
However, if these students could just have got over their precious "icky" feelings for a few moments, if, say, the paper editor had said "a mother fed her baby? Is this news, really? No story here", if we didn't make nursing mothers feel horrible (turn to a wall, cover with a blanket, go in a nasty bathroom, shame her for having made a tough choice in an emergency), maybe then society could start to get over it.
And if nursing mothers are always made to hide, then how is anyone going to get used to it, and attitudes change? :twocents: