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Homework, Hegemony, and the Marginalised Parent: Unmasking Structural Barriers to Working-Class Involvement in Mathematics Education in South Africa Cover

Homework, Hegemony, and the Marginalised Parent: Unmasking Structural Barriers to Working-Class Involvement in Mathematics Education in South Africa

Open Access
|Jun 2026

Abstract

Introduction: This study interrogates how mathematics homework in South African rural schools reproduces structural inequality through neoliberal and colonial schooling systems.

Methods: A systematic review of 18 qualitative and quantitative studies (2018–2024) was conducted using secondary data analysis from academic and policy sources.

Results: The findings reveal that economic hardship, epistemic exclusion, and linguistic barriers severely limit rural parental involvement in homework. Homework reinforces educational stratification by privileging middle-class norms and resources.

Discussion: The deficit discourse surrounding “uninvolved” parents is critiqued, revealing systemic oppression embedded in education policy and practice. Homework is often portrayed as a site of alienation, rather than empowerment.

Limitations: The study is limited by its reliance on secondary data and exclusion of direct parental voices from primary data collection.

Conclusions: Educational equity demands the abolition of homework as currently structured and the reimagination of parental involvement within a decolonial, socialist ethic that values rural parents as co-educators.

Language: English
Page range: 57 - 75
Submitted on: Jun 19, 2025
Accepted on: Oct 16, 2025
Published on: Jun 13, 2026
Published by: DTI University
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 3 issues per year

© 2026 France Khutso Lavhelani Kgobe, published by DTI University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.