Kimberly, I understand your dilemma; we'd like to see all moms choose to breastfeed their babies. However, the reality is that some moms are going to bottlefeed and, for the benefit of the babies, we do need to address that issue. I had the priveledge of hearing Molly Pessl speak at a WIC conference last week, and she had some interesting thoughts on bottlefeeding including the fact that many moms don't know how to properly mix formula and don't know the importance of holding their babies while feeding them or how to hold them in a way that best simulates a breastfeeding position and promotes bonding. It's important for the health of the bottlefed babies that their mothers know how to properly bottlefeed if that's what they're choosing to do. Is there any reason why you can't make sure you address breastfeeding and bottlefeeding in the same class session so that the bottlefeeders will hear the breastfeeding information? You can spend the bulk of the time on the benefits and how-tos of breastfeeding, tell the TRUTH about breastmilk vs formula so that everyone can make an informed choice, and then say "If you're choosing to bottlefeed, here's the proper way to do it". Plant the seeds of breastfeeding; some parents may change their minds now and others may still bottlefeed this baby, but breastfeed the next. You don't always know what kind of impact you'll have. This may seem like a compromise, but look at it as changing things one step at a time. Hope this helps. Dorothy Rae Collier