Abstract

This article discusses the interconnectedness of poverty and gender and learning at primary school level in KwaZulu Natal Province of South Africa.  A qualitative study was conducted in two schools in the poverty stricken Elandskop area where data were collected using in-depth face-to-face interviews from purposely selected participants comprising of learners, educators and the headmasters. The aim was to analyse how male and female learners experience poverty, gender role socialisation and the effect on children’ bio-psychosocial health of both sexes.  While the findings of the study revealed that poverty and gender socialisation of boys and girls have bio-psychosocial negative influences on them, the gender dimension of poverty had the most negative influence on girls. It was found that primary school learners grapple with coping mechanisms when confronted with poverty coupled with limited family and professional support. Gendered family roles and oppressive religious beliefs have been found to have influence on early marriages and teenage pregnancies resulting in school dropouts. The findings of the study imply that school social work is vehemently lacking yet necessary in schools in the area to assist educators in addressing the psychosocial ill-health of learners which educators are less equipped to professionally handle. The study recommends appropriate bio-psychosocial interventions early in the lives of learners to curtail lifelong developmental predicaments.   

Highlights

  • The problem of poverty in South Africa is not new but the interconnectedness of poverty, gender and primary school education has been given a blind eye by scholars

  • The Headmasters of Nana and Lala Primary Schools were selected as they oversee learning in their schools and have overall information on how the learners are affected by poverty, gender and learning at the schools

  • The headmasters confirmed this: ‘I have had cases where learners reported that their lunch was stolen by a child who has not eaten for over the past 8 hours’, (Headmaster of Lala Primary School)

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Summary

Introduction

The problem of poverty in South Africa is not new but the interconnectedness of poverty, gender and primary school education has been given a blind eye by scholars. This is a challenge today more especially to young children, (Paddison, 2017), with the hardest hit being those living in rural areas, where scanty interventions are the order of the day resulting in untold bio-psychosocial problems. Poverty among the adult population affects mainly their children, (66.8%), and affects critical developmental spheres with the girl child being the recipient of the unfairness of poverty, gendered development and socialisation within a family.

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