Scaffolding
Scaffolding (a term developed by Wood, Bruner and Ross from Vygotsky's ideas) is the temporary, tailored support a more knowledgeable other provides to help a learner accomplish a task within the ZPD. Like the scaffolding around a building, it is adjustable and meant to be removed: the helper gives more support when the child struggles and gradually withdraws it as competence grows, until the child performs independently. Good scaffolding includes prompts, hints, modelling, questioning, breaking a task into steps, and providing partial solutions — always just enough to keep the learner progressing, never doing the work for them. The key features CTET tests are that scaffolding is temporary (faded over time), responsive (adjusted to the learner's needs) and aimed at eventual independence. This is the practical engine that moves a child through the ZPD.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Core ideas
| Social first | Learning is social before it is individual (inter- → intra-personal) |
|---|---|
| ZPD | Gap between independent ability and assisted ability |
| MKO | More Knowledgeable Other — teacher, parent, abler peer |
| Scaffolding | Temporary, faded support that lifts the child through the ZPD |
| Tools of thought | Language & culture mediate and shape cognition |
Piaget vs Vygotsky (one line)
| Engine of development | Piaget: individual action · Vygotsky: social interaction |
|---|---|
| Role of language | Piaget: follows thought · Vygotsky: drives thought |
| Private speech | Piaget: egocentric (immature) · Vygotsky: self-guiding (useful) |