“…Previous research has extensively described the interactive practices whereby homework unfolds as a family activity (Colla, 2023;Forsberg, 2007;Kremer-Sadlik & Fatigante, 2015;Wingard, 2006;Wingard & Forsberg, 2009) as well as the effects of parent-child homework interactions on children's subject-related learning and school success (e.g., Van Voorhis, 2001;Battle-Bailey, 2004). However, less attention has been devoted to investigating homework as a morally dense activity, a vehicle of cultural knowledge and a means whereby children are socialized into becoming "speakers of cultures" (Ochs, 2002) far beyond the academic subject-matters (but see Colla, 2020Colla, , 2022. In a few words, literature largely fails to address the moral relevance of parent-child homework talk and the ways in which it contributes to socializing children into morally competent members of the communities where their sociocultural development mostly occurs, i.e., family and school.…”