PiE 33(2) June 2015.indb


Perspectives in Education 2015: 33(2) http://www.perspectives-in-education.com
ISSN 0258-2236
© 2015 University of the Free State

109

Books or and Babies: Pregnancy and 
young parents in schools
ROBERT MORRELL, DEEVIA BHANA & TAMARA SHEFER

Cape Town: HSRC Press, 2012

ISBN 978-0-7969-2365-3

236pp

Reviewed by: Tracey Feltham-King

From the outset, the title Books or and babies: Pregnancy and young parents in 
schools cleverly indicates the broad terms of reference for the investigation of the 
topic. The deliberate strikethrough of  or being replaced by and frames the authors’ 
critical approach. In refusing to stay within the taken-for-granted binary where 
pregnancy and parenting are considered irreconcilable with schooling, the authors 
move the focus away from the individual young woman in order to pay long-overdue 
attention to the broader context in which pregnancy and parenting happens in South 
African schools.

The book affords the reader an opportunity to try to understand the highly 
charged gendered environment in which school management, educators and 
learners endeavour to balance pregnancy and parenting with schooling. This has 
undoubtedly been a difficult undertaking not least of all because of the moral panic 
frequently generated in the media on this topic. The authors intend to show how 
these moralising discourses are utilised to exclude young women and deny them 
their right to education. They highlight the effects of these discourses so that the 
reader is left with the clear impression that at least some of the moral outrage usually 
reserved for young women would be more effectively used if aimed at the injustice 
associated with these acts of exclusion.

The focus on this topic is pertinent, since the South African Schools Act (No. 84 
of 1996) was formulated by the Department of Education (DoE) with the intention 

Tracey Feltham-King 
University of Fort Hare, Psychology Department 
Tel: 043 704 7214 
E-mail: tking@ufh.ac.za



Perspectives in Education 2015: 33(2)

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of implementing a human rights framework in order to minimise discriminatory acts 
such as expulsion of pregnant learners or denying young parents access to schools. The 
five-year (2005-2010) collaborative project funded by the South African-Netherlands 
Research Programme on Alternatives in Development (SANPAD), on which the book 
is based, seeks to establish whether the progressive policy space created by the 
legislation had, in fact, translated into responsive and supportive contexts for young 
pregnant women and parents in schools. 

The reader is afforded a rare opportunity to be privy to the varied perspectives of 
the major stakeholders in 14 urban secondary schools located in two South African 
cities, namely Durban and Cape Town. These schools were selected to reflect not 
only geographical differences, but also a variety of types of schools (an enduring 
remnant of the apartheid education system). These schools were not intended to be 
representative in any statistical sense, but rather managed to capture the diversity 
of raced, classed and gendered constructions of pregnancy and parenting among 
approximately 11 principals and 79 educators.

The six specific research questions, around which the research project was 
designed, provide the structure for the three sections of the book. The first section 
is concerned with examining the extent of the implementation of the South African 
Schools Act (SASA), which was formulated with the intention of promoting the 
educational performance of young women who attend school during pregnancy 
and after childbirth. We are given an insightful and rich, qualitative picture of the 
perceptions and reported practices of school management and educators towards 
pregnant and parenting learners.

In these interviews and focus-group discussions conducted with teachers and 
principals, it became clear that the formal commitments to women’s and children’s 
rights, as expressed in SASA, are unevenly and erratically implemented in ways that 
are often detrimental to the learners. The results show that often the presence 
of young pregnant women or parenting learners is at odds with some principals’ 
and teachers’ notions of authority, power, developmental norms and responsibility 
for care. The varied responses from administrators and educators ranged from 
ostracising, discriminatory attitudes in some schools to high levels of tolerance and 
care in others. As pointed out by the authors, this is a small, but hopeful finding that 
could suggest that stigma in respect of early reproduction is easing and shifting in 
some South African schools. Now that it has been identified, this small shift is, as the 
authors suggest, something that can be built upon.

The middle (and most substantial) section of the book deals with a quantitative 
measure of the perceptions of over 1,400 learners. The authors acknowledge that, 
despite media-fuelled impressions that there is a large proportion of pregnant or 
parenting learners in South African schools, there is hardly any clear evidence to that 
effect. The sample of learners who were surveyed, however, indicate that, compared 
to the accepted figures, fewer learners than expected are pregnant or biological 



The Politics of Pleasure in Sexuality Education: Pleasure Bound
Pedro Pinto

111

parents, even though a high proportion of them are involved in various kinds of 
substitute parenting.

In measuring the attitudes of learners to pregnant or parenting peers, it was found 
that there is still some support for gender-inequitable stereotypes about women and 
men with regard to pregnancy and parenting. The heteronormative construction of 
manhood, which situates men in the public sphere and positions them as material 
providers, is fairly entrenched. By contrast, constructions of femininity situate young 
women in the private sphere and as such they are positioned as nurturers. These 
essentialist constructions collude to create the expectation that young women carry 
the bulk of the responsibility associated with teen-aged pregnancy. 

The third section of the book follows on from the quantitative measures by 
exploring the gendered constructions that influenced the experiences and practices 
of young parent learners. Twenty-six in-depth interviews were conducted, mostly 
with young mothers. The researchers note how challenging it was to identify young 
fathers who were openly parenting in a school-based context. Unsurprisingly, 
then, the main finding was that the experience of young parenthood in schools is 
profoundly gendered, with young women bearing the brunt of pregnancy, birth 
and parenthood. However, despite the traditionally stereotypically gendered power 
relations (further complicated by disadvantaged material conditions), there was 
evidence of some young men who took on care work and sought to be more involved 
with the nurturing of their children.

A comprehensive final section complements the rigorous research, on which this 
book is based. It discusses the implications of these findings for policy and school 
practice. This research highlights that it does not suffice to simply endow young 
pregnant and parenting learners with rights to non-discriminatory education. The 
shared assumptions concerning gender, class and raced relations of power do not 
disappear when well-intentioned rights-based legislation is promulgated, since it is 
the school management teams, educators and learners who ultimately determine 
how pregnancy and parenting are handled in schools. Endowing learners with the 
right to education within a non-discriminatory environment assumes not only a 
particular kind of relationship between management, educators and learners, but 
also an enabling context. The evidence presented in this section shows that despite 
the attention paid to gender inequalities (at the level of policy), there has been 
no revolutionary change with regard to gendered power relations that construct 
relationships and contexts within schools.

The final chapter of the book creates a striking visual backdrop in the form of 
a photographic essay by renowned South African photographer, Cedric Nunn. He 
merges his professional experience of being a photographer with his lived experiences 
of having been a young father, reflecting a touching personal engagement with his 
photographic subjects. Following on from these personal portraits, the authors 
conclude the book by offering their own biographic reflections of parenthood. 



Perspectives in Education 2015: 33(2)

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Together, these reflexive narrative and photographic accounts show how, despite the 
diverse and stratified contexts in South Africa, there are many shared commonalities 
evident in the daily challenges of parenting. 

It is fair to say that the thick description of teenage pregnancy and parenting 
in South African schools constructed by the authors in this book steers away from 
locating the problem within the individual young woman. This critical approach is in 
line with an increasing number of feminist researchers who question the automatic 
problematisation of early reproduction and parenting as inevitably an individual 
catastrophe or deleterious social problem. Macleod (2014: 130) argues that this 
taken-for-granted assumption, which is sold by a great deal of social science research 
on the topic, should be tempered by feminist analyses of gendered power relations 
which are “vigilant about refusing an abstraction that pre-defines pregnant [and 
parenting] young women”. In this case, the refusal takes the form of focusing on the 
heteronormative gendered dynamics within schools that are oppressive to pregnant 
and parenting learners.  

Public schools have an undisputed obligation to promote gender equality in pursuit 
of the creation of a fair and equal South African society. The research documented 
in this book is a useful resource for school managers and educators, because it is 
committed to that aim. It provides the starting point needed to engage critically with 
the multiple and contradictory discourses that reinforce gendered constructions of 
pregnancy and parenting in schools. Ideally, it should also provide sufficient impetus 
for school management teams, educators and researchers to intensify the pursuit of 
reproductive justice for young South Africans by insisting on the provision of non-
discriminatory educational experiences to pregnant and parenting learners. This 
book goes some way towards making an argument for bringing about systematic 
interventions aimed at making schools places where learners have a reasonable 
expectation of reproductive justice and the necessary support to balance books and 
babies in fulfilment of their rights.

Reference
Macleod C 2014. ‘Adolescent pregnancy’: A feminist issue. In AL Cherry & ME 

Dillon (Eds), International handbook of adolescent pregnancy: Medical, psychosocial 
and public health responses (pp. 129-145). New York: Springer.