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  1. Margaret Beall McFarland (July 3, 1905 – September 12, 1988) was an American child psychologist and a consultant to the television show Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.

  2. Jan 8, 2020 · But far fewer people are familiar with Margaret McFarland, the child psychologist who mentored him and helped shape his groundbreaking television show.

  3. Dr. Margaret McFarland was a p rofessor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and the Director of the Arsenal Family and Children’s Center in Pittsburgh which she co-founded with Dr. Benjamin Spock and Erik Erikson.

    • Lauren Vinopal
    • Anything human is mentionable, and anything mentionable is manageable. When Fred first began his study of child development at Pitt, McFarland help him get in touch with his own childhood memories and feelings.
    • Attitudes aren’t taught — they’re caught. In a 2003 interview with the National Endowment for the Humanities, David McCullough boiled down McFarland’s worldview: “What she taught, in essence, is that attitudes aren’t taught, they’re caught.
    • Learning depends on love. McFarland championed a teaching philosophy based on love and compassion. Her friend and colleague Rev. Douglas Nowicki remembers that, “For her, learning could only take place in the context of love.
    • Be an observer. Pittsburgh play therapist Carole McNamee, one of McFarland’s students, credits her with being one of the sharpest observers. “She could just spot things.
  4. Nov 19, 2019 · He found something important for them to say, thanks in large part to the person who would become his lifelong collaborator, Margaret McFarland, at the University of Pittsburgh.

  5. Biography: Margaret McFarland was an American child psychologist who was a key figure in shaping the philosophy of the acclaimed television show Mister Rogers' Neighbourhood. She worked with Fred Rogers throughout its duration, ensuring that the show was always based in present best practice.

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  7. It was the voice of Fred Rogers’ chief consultant Dr. Margaret McFarland, a highly regarded child psychologist. They met regularly to discuss child development theory, so that the scripts would authentically reflect the real concerns and feelings of children.

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