He received a B.Sc. zoology from the
University of Wyoming, studying under his father, John W. Scott. After taking out a Rhodes Scholarship at
Oxford University under E. B. Ford, he completed a Ph.D. in Psychology from the
University of Chicago, where he studied under renowned scholar of genetics and evolution,
Sewall Wright. Scott's first academic position was at
Wabash College, where he chaired the department of Zoology from 1935 to 1945. As his
sociobiological research developed, he moved to the
Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. Here he chaired the division of behavior studies, continuing to develop his comparative approach, combining animal behavior in the service of understanding and ameliorating human problems. Moving to
Bowling Green State University, he took up a Regents Professorship in Psychology, and founded the Center for the Study of Social Behavior. == Achievements ==