Vygotsky's Accomplishments

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The following paper explores the life and accomplishments of Lev Semenovich Vygotsky. It will outline his early experiences as a citizen of Western Russia that ultimately shaped the path for significant advancements in the field of child development. The innovative psychologist’s short career focused on child development, developmental psychology, and educational philosophy; through persistent research, he managed to develop a sociocultural theory of child and adolescent development designed to account for the influence of culture and social interaction on a child's growth and development.

Born on November 17, 1896 in Belorussia, Lev Semenovich Vygostky was the center of an art and literature driven family. He elected to study law and began …show more content…

Subsequently, he was invited to join the Moscow Institute of Experimental Psychology, where he took on the roles of a teacher and researcher for a steady nine years. It was during his time as a research fellow at the Psychological Institute in Moscow that Vygotsky formally started his career in psychology.
As time elapsed, the Russian psychologist would become known as the “Mozart of Psychology” due to his ingenious ability to form multiple different theories in a short span of time. That already short time, however, was cut shorter when Vygotsky died of tuberculosis at the age of thirty-seven, leaving many incomplete theories behind. Despite such, his finalized theories would prove to greatly influence the fields of child development and cognitive …show more content…

The concept of MKO is largely integrated with the Zone of Proximal Development, which is the learning gap between the levels that determine a child’s capabilities both independently (actual development) and dependently (level of potential development). Vygotsky furtherly claimed that children gradually achieved more challenging tasks with the aid of someone more experienced. This form of social support was termed scaffolding: the process of a more competent person helping a child master a skilled task by breaking it down into subunits and guiding performance. For example, a common scaffolding strategy in the classroom can be when the teacher describes or illustrates a concept, problem, or process in various ways to ensure understanding among all students. Scaffolding practices must be constantly adjusted to meet a child's new capabilities since children are maturing equally as

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