A Morehouse professor hailed for keeping the child of a student in class



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Morehouse College visiting professor, Nathan Alexander, said that he was only trying to help when he not only allowed a student to take his toddler to his class on Friday, but that he was not allowed to attend. He volunteered to keep it while he was teaching.

Images of the unconventional situation attracted so much attention on social media, many praising Alexander's efforts to help student, Wayne Hayer, when he could not find child care.

"I'm no exception," said Alexander in a Saturday afternoon telephone interview with Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "We have teachers who (assist students in a similar way) every day."


Alexander said he initially spoke of the idea that the student brought the child to class a few weeks ago when Hayer said he could not stay during office hours because he had to pick her up.

To the teacher's surprise, Hayer accepted Alexander. Hayer arrived at Alexander's algebra class with the little girl in a pink outfit. The teacher said that he was "happy".

Alexander, however, noticed that Hayer was distracted by watching the child at the beginning of the 50-minute class and offered to take her in his arms.

"Hey, I'll take it so you can get good grades," recalls Alexander.

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Alexander said that he had rocked the child's left hand and lectured with the right hand. The child, said the teacher, was silent in class and had fallen asleep towards the end of his lecture.

"My lecture must become boring," Alexander told his students.


Alexander, who joined the Morehouse faculty in 2017, said it was not his first experience allowing a student to bring a child to class. He recalled that one student had brought an 8 or 9 year old child into his class.

For him, these allowances are part of the mission of colleges such as Morehouse, the only college in the country reserved for African-American men – men who find ways to help other men. The most famous graduate of the University of Atlanta is Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.

Alexander, 34, has no children, but said he felt it was important to take such steps, if necessary, for students to help them learn and know that many educators make similar decisions.

"Teachers do it every day in their own way," he said of those who practiced his profession across the country. "That's what they do."

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