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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91pornÊÓÆ”.In 1993, a library science graduate student named Aisha White got a special opportunity: to introduce Fred Rogers at her Pitt commencement ceremony.Â
In her speech she said, âWhen Fred Rogers first appeared on channel 13, I was 14, and at that age, did not hold him in awe.âÂ
âThat changed four years later,â she continued, âwhen I became the proud single mother of a darling baby girl, who grew to love Mister Rogers. To understand the significance of my daughter's relationship with Mister Rogers, you need only multiply that one child's fasci91pornÊÓÆ” more than 10 million times, since over 10 million children are devoted viewers of Mister Rogers every week.âÂ
That speech was the start of Whiteâs long-lasting connection to the famed childrenâs entertainer â one that persisted long after his death in 2003.
Today, as director of the  in the School of Educationâs Office of Child Development, White (A&S â87, SCI â93G, â03G) is one of the many Pitt people whose lives and careers were touched by Rogers.Â
âMy advisor at the time was (professor emerita) Margaret Kimmel, who worked closely with Fred. She selected me to introduce Fred,â said White. âAnd so, onstage I talked about my daughter to make that personal connection. She loved âMister Rogersâ Neighborhood.â He was her man,â White said with a laugh.Â
From 1994 to 2001, White worked alongside Rogers as director of the Mister Rogersâ Neighborhood Child Care Partnership, where she developed materials for child care providers to use Rogersâ television program to support social-emotional development.Â
âFredâs office was about 5 feet away from mine. He had a really small, teeny little office and if I ever had any questions, I could go in and ask,â said White.Â
Today, White carries on Rogersâ legacy by serving as a consultant on the creative team for âDaniel Tigerâs Neighborhood,â a modern-day interpretation of Mister Rogersâ Neighborhood produced by Fred Rogers Productions. It stars Daniel Tiger, son of Daniel Striped Tiger from the original âNeighborhoodâ series. Her Emmy Award-winning contributions to the show involve providing input on scripts and making sure the show is culturally relevant â even advising on hairstyles for biracial characters in the show.Â
Whiteâs colleague Shannon Wanless, director of the Office of Child Development, is also a consultant for âDaniel Tigerâs Neighborhood.âÂ
âI think every single project weâre doing at the Office of Child Development, in a way, lives and breathes the Fred Rogers legacy. We honor child development the same way he did in his work,â said Wanless. âJust like Fred did, we are constantly checking to make sure we are being true to theory and research about children.â
âFred wasnât afraid to take on difficult issues, and it makes me think of our work here in the Office of Child Development,â said White.
White and Wanless said a memorable phrase from Rogers ties to the P.R.I.D.E Programâs work: âWhatâs mentionable is manageable.âÂ
âThe P.R.I.D.E Program in particular is really trying to help us understand how racial identity is developing in young children,â said Wanless. âSo, by jumping in and talking with our children, weâll get them in the habit of turning to a parent when they need someone.â
Wanless also pointed to the Office of Child Developmentâs book drive called  which she said has a similar goal: getting picture books in the hands of adults âto help them address things that may not feel mentionable to them,â and opening the door to address those things with their children.
White added that earning the trust of children, something Fred Rogers was able to do so well, ultimately happens when we talk to them â making things âmentionable.âÂ
âAnother thing Fred often said is that âWe can never know whatâs really going on inside a childâs mind.â And we wonât know that unless we begin to have meaningful conversations with our children, develop trust with them and figure out ways to elicit conversation with them,â said White.Â
A longer historyÂ
Long before Rogersâ time, conversations about media for children were happening on and around Pittâs campusâdating back to the late 1800s.
âOne of the many things that are special about Fred Rogers is he was interested in how we can make media actually valuable and appropriate for children,â said Courtney Weikle-Mills, director of the  in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciencesâ Department of English. âAnd these are questions that have been asked in Pittsburgh for a long time.â
Many of the people having those conversations, like Margaret Kimmell, Margaret Hodges and Margaret McFarland, were influential to Rogers, said Weikle-Mills.
âThat longer history that Rogers is a part of is connected to the Childrenâs Literature [Certificate] Program in interesting ways,â said Weikle-Mills, who added that Pitt started offering courses in childrenâs literature as early as 1933.Â
According to Weikle-Mills, the program was developed as an interdisciplinary one â with the idea that people who studied childrenâs literature âneeded to also understand child development and work with folks who were working directly with children, not just people in the English department.â
Arielle Reed (A&S â17) is a mentee of Weikle-Mills and graduate of the Childrenâs Literature Certificate Program at Pitt. She now also works for Fred Rogers Productions as a production coordinator, her âdream job,â thanks to a connection made by Weikle-Mills and , associate professor and director of graduate studies in the Department of English.
Reed credits the Childrenâs Literature Program for giving her the necessary skills to thrive in her role today.
âPart of what Pitt helped me with is my editorial skills â critically evaluating literature and developing an editorial eye,â said Reed, who spends most of her time working on âDaniel Tigerâs Neighborhood.â âSo today, I have a really honed eye for details that matter to the values of Fred Rogers Productions â which are, ultimately, the values of Fred Rogers.â
âHe had a lot of things to say that translate into adulthood and being a good person on this planet. This is a necessary thing in todayâs climate. I think people need it,â said Reed.
Read and view more Mister Rogers memories from Pitt people on a  set up by the Office of University Communications.
An abbreviated timeline of childrenâs media and literature in Pittsburgh
1896:Â Pittsburghâs Carnegie Library opens one of the first childrenâs reading rooms in the country.
1901: Carnegie Library Childrenâs Department creates Carnegie Library Schoolâ which ultimately becomes Pittâs iSchool, and later, the School of Computing and Information.
1930s:Â Pitt starts offering courses in childrenâs literature.
Late 1950s-1980s:Â Fred Rogers holds weekly meetings with his Pitt mentor, Margaret McFarland.
1968:Â âMister Rogersâ Neighborhoodâ premieres. Its production takes place for over three decades at WQED Studios, just blocks from Pittâs campus.
1976:ÌęMargaret Hodges, graduate of the Carnegie Library School and faculty member of Pittâs School of Library and Information Sciences, develops the Elizabeth Nesbitt Room, which houses a collection of archives from âMister Rogersâ Neighborhood.â
1978: Margaret Kimmell, who studied under Margaret Hodges, joins the University faculty in 1978 as an associate professor in the School of Information Sciencesâ Department of Library and Information Sciences.Â
1981:Â Pittâs Childrenâs Literature Program is established. Kimmell is a co-founder and serves as director.
1996:Â Kimmel, along with Mark Collins â a creative writing instructor in the English department â edits a collection of essays titled âMister Rogersâ Neighborhood: Children, Television, and Fred Rogers.â One of the essays included in this volume was by journalist Jeanne Marie Laskas, who would later become the director of Pittâs Creative Writing Program.
2001:Â Production ends for Mister Rogersâ Neighborhood.Â
For more information on this history, visit the .