ABSTRACT

L. S. Vygotsky and English in Education and the Language Arts focuses on the hugely significant contributions of L. S. Vygotsky to research, theory, and practice in English and the Language Arts, exploring the relevance of Vygotsky’s works for today’s teachers and researchers.

Drawing on his 30 years of study, Smagorinsky interprets Vygotsky in relation to literacy education, teacher education, special education, and how life outside school has an impact on how people function within them. This insightful and accessible text firstly explores Vygotsky’s early life to situate him historically and culturally and goes on to trace his understanding of human psychology as it relates to the social contexts of schools and pupils’ lives at home. Vygotsky’s pedagogical ideas are then discussed in depth, with specific attention on the role of emotions, the zone of proximal development, expanding textuality beyond writing, and his belief in the primacy of socialization. This book illuminates new areas of understanding, and challenges common perceptions available through limited and selective readings, establishing Vygotsky as a complex developmental psychologist rather than a classroom practitioner.

With points for discussion and reflection provided throughout, this text will be invaluable for student teachers, teachers, and academics in the field of English and the Language Arts.

part I|68 pages

Historical Matters in Understanding Vygotsky

chapter 1|20 pages

Biographical Elements of a Short Life

chapter 2|12 pages

Culture, History, and Society

chapter 3|17 pages

Marxism and Vygotsky in the Soviet Context

part II|86 pages

Factors in Human Development

part III|102 pages

Pedagogy

chapter 10|22 pages

Vygotsky's Contributions to Pedagogy

chapter 12|21 pages

Teaching Literature

chapter 13|19 pages

Teaching Writing

part IV|52 pages

Pedology

chapter 15|14 pages

Vygotsky the Pedologist

chapter 16|18 pages

The Pedology Decree

Vygotsky as Anti-Marxist Bourgeoisie

chapter 17|18 pages

The Pedology Decree

Critiques of Method and Focus

part V|6 pages

Conclusion

chapter 18|4 pages

Conclusion