Abstract Sociocultural theory emphasizes the role of social interactions, cultural context, and language in cognitive development and learning. In second language acquisition, parents, proficient learners, and teachers provide support to develop learners' Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD). This study investigates the utilization of various sociocultural theory strategies—including scaffolding, mediation, activity theory, and corrective feedback—to develop L2 learners' ZPD and examines their perceived effectiveness in high school EFL classrooms in Pakistan. A descriptive quantitative research design was employed. The population consisted of high school English teachers from District Bahawalnagar, Punjab Province. Using stratified random sampling, 160 teachers (80 male, 80 female) from urban and rural schools across five tehsils participated. A 5-point Likert scale questionnaire was used as the data collection tool. Findings revealed that teachers highly value sociocultural theory-based strategies. The most effective activities for developing ZPD were questioning (M=4.00), group discussion (M=3.98), corrective feedback (M=3.88), demonstration (M=3.82), and debates (M=3.77). Teachers reported frequent use of scaffolding strategies including breaking down complex tasks (M=3.89), providing clear explanations (M=4.56), and encouraging student interest (M=4.36). The study confirms that sociocultural theory-based strategies—modeling, bridging, schema building, contextualizing, and feedback—significantly enhance language learning experiences, boost language growth, and increase student participation. These findings have important pedagogical implications for EFL instruction at the secondary level.
Zunaira Khan (Wed,) studied this question.