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  1. openculture.com

    The maxim "children need rules" does not necessarily describe either a right-wing position or a leftist one; either a political or a religious idea. ... Mr. Rogers' Nine Rules for Speaking to Children (1977) in Education, K-12, ... repeat­ing the first step." "Good" rep­re­sents a val­ue judg­ment, so: Your favorite grown-ups ...
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  3. fatherly.com

    The Mister Rogers' Neighborhood staff were so impressed by Rogers's ability to speak to children that they wrote a translation manual. Written in jest, but extraordinarily accurate, "Let's Talk About Freddish," offers nine commandments of communication that collectively serve as a guide to speaking to young children in a way that ...
  4. psychologicalscience.org

    On Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, the show that he created 50 years ago and starred in, he was the epitome of simple, natural ease. But as. I write in my forthcoming book, The Good Neighbor: The Life and Work of Fred Rogers, Rogers's placidity belied the intense care he took in shaping each episode of his program. He insisted that every word ...
  5. relevantchildrensministry.com

    Fred Rogers aka "Mister Rogers" was a children's television actor, producer, musician, puppeteer and ordained Presbyterian minister. His show "Mr. Roger's Neighborhood" was watched by millions of kids. At its' peak, 8% of television sets were tuned into his show each week. He became an icon of children's entertainment and education.
  6. neatorama.com

    Fred Rogers had an uncanny ability to connect with young children through his show Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Or maybe it wasn't so uncanny. Rogers put in a lot of work to make sure everything he said was something a child could understand. That wasn't easy, since children lack the years of language practice and references that adults have. Rogers went over every line in a script, consulted ...
  7. fieldsdennis.com

    In this May 27, 1993 file photo Fred Rogers pauses during a taping of his show "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood," in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File) For the millions of adults who grew up watching him on public television, Fred Rogers represents the most important human values: respect, compassion, kindness, integrity, humility.
  8. Well, yes and no. The way a lot of these shows are, they actually reinforce the short attention spans. Mr. Rogers, on the other hand, captured the child's attention the whole time, bringing the kid's focus in and allowing them to develop the ability to pay greater attention for longer periods of time.
  9. lettersremain.com

    Having not grown up in the US, I only became aware of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood as an adult. However, this is entirely due to Fred Rogers himself: his kindness, his humanity, and his ability to draw children into his safe world.. In the lead-up to the publishing of The Good Neighbor: The Life and Work of Fred Rogers, author Maxwell King wrote about Fred Rogers' careful and deliberate way ...

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