Amaya Garcia
Director, PreK-12 Research and Practice
Fifty-six years ago today, Fred Rogers before the Senate Subcommittee on Communications to ask them to maintain $20 million in funding for public broadcasting. Rogers, as most will know, was the man behind Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, the television show aimed at supporting young children鈥檚 social emotional development. He explained that much of his work focused on helping children understand that they are unique, they are cared for, and that they can manage their feelings. He concluded his testimony by reciting a song he had written to help children deal with feelings of anger. Senator John Pastore was charmed. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 wonderful. I think it鈥檚 wonderful,鈥 he repeated. 鈥 Looks like you just earned the $20 million.鈥澛
It鈥檚 difficult to imagine a similar scene playing out now. At a March hearing Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R, GA-14) called for defunding two mainstays of public media: PBS and NPR. She lobbed a against public media, for example, that 鈥渢he content that is being put out through these state-sponsored outlets is so radical it is brainwashing鈥merican children with un-American, anti-family, pro-crime, fake news.鈥澛 Greene鈥檚 comments distort the purpose of public media, but seem to have convinced President Trump, directing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to . By politicizing public media, the current presidential administration is diminishing and dismantling a trusted and free educational resource that has positively impacted young children鈥檚 learning and development.
Decades of research prove that the educational shows that air on PBS, such as Sesame Street, Super Why, Daniel Tiger鈥檚 Neighborhood, and Peg + Cat, have a measurable impact on young children鈥檚 early literacy and numeracy skills and social emotional development.听
Sesame Street, which first aired in 1969, was created to help low-income preschool children learn foundational skills to help get them ready for school. Research has always been an integral part of the show鈥檚 development process. As Joan Ganz Cooney, who created the show, wrote in the introduction to the book the creators were constantly testing the material for 鈥渁ppeal and comprehension.鈥 Content would be changed or removed based on their findings. Producers and researchers were also interested in knowing whether children actually learned from the show.听
A on Sesame Street highlights that children who frequently watched the show performed better than children who watched it less on standardized tests of word-letter knowledge, mathematics, vocabulary and school readiness. Other studies summarized in the review found that children who watched the show exhibited a range of what researchers call 鈥減ro-social鈥 behaviors, such as sharing with their peers and taking turns. In addition, adolescents who watched Sesame Street as children had higher math and science grades and spent more time reading books for fun than their peers who did not watch the show.
But Sesame Street has not just benefitted children in the U.S.; the program has a global reach. A 2013 of 21 international studies (from 15 countries outside of the US) found that children learned literacy and numeracy and also about science and the environment, health and safety, and their own culture. The authors of the 2013 analysis conclude that 鈥Sesame Street is an enduring example of a scalable and effective early childhood educational intervention.鈥澛
This impactful international work is now at risk due to the , one of the first agencies to be dismantled by the Department of Government Efficiency.听
Sesame Workshop鈥檚 model of using research to inform the design and development of the show and to understand its impact on children鈥檚 learning set a foundation for the shows that followed. Today, many of the shows featured on PBS are rooted in research and apply findings from the聽 learning sciences to ensure that their content and structure are developmentally appropriate. Programs such as Super Why, Daniel Tiger鈥檚 Neighborhood, Peg + Cat, and Molly of Denali provide evidence of the efficacy of this approach. Most of these programs were developed with the support of grants from the US Department of Education that have the broad aim of improving school readiness and require that programs be available on public broadcasting stations. [1]
was designed to support early literacy skills (e.g., alphabet knowledge, vocabulary, story structure)聽 for children ages 3-6. A by children鈥檚 media researcher Deborah (Linebarger) Nichols found that children who watched the show knew more letters and letter sounds and had stronger phonological and phonemic awareness than those in the control group after 8 weeks. focuses on teaching children how to use informational text to answer real-world questions. In 2021, researchers from EDC and SRI of 263 first graders to learn more about how the show impacted their problem solving skills. Over a 9-week period some of the children interacted with Molly of Denali videos, games, and activities via a preloaded tablet, while others had a tablet that did not have these resources and was blocked from PBS Kids altogether. Their results showed that children who interacted with the show鈥檚 resources and content saw improvements in their ability to use informational text to solve a real-world problem. These findings underscore the role that developmentally appropriate digital media can play in developing the foundational skills young children need to learn in order to read and comprehend text.听
PBS has also featured educational programs designed to support early numeracy skills and the . In 聽the show鈥檚 protagonist (Peg) used math and teamwork to help solve a problem such as how to get 100 runaway chickens back into their coop. Similar to the research described above, a team from EDC and SRI provided children with a curated set of resources via a dedicated website and devices (e.g., tablet and laptop). They , including whether children who interacted with the show鈥檚 resources see improvements in their mathematical skills and what role parents and caregivers play in supporting their child鈥檚 use of and learning from these resources. Findings revealed that children who engaged with the materials saw significant growth in their mathematical skills and parents and caregivers felt more comfortable in supporting their child鈥檚 math learning. Including a focus on the role of parents is important given other research demonstrating children鈥檚 learning from educational media.
These positive impacts are being ignored by Greene and Republican colleagues who seek to end funding for public media. Part of their argument rests on the fact that the internet has made information more accessible and that there is now a . What this argument overlooks is that the internet, along with streaming services and satellite radio, is not free; having access at home comes with a monthly bill. And while YouTube is full of child-directed content, parents do not have a way to discern quality or whether the content is developmentally appropriate and designed to promote learning.听
Eliminating federal funding for public media will only add to the list of anti-child actions the current administration has taken. In its first 100 days, the Trump administration has and Head Start, even in the face of a measles outbreak, that support child care programs, foster care and direct-aid to vulnerable families, that advises on infant screening, weakened civil rights enforcement and cut for unaccompanied minors. Taken together, these actions will have a compounding effect that will negatively impact children and families for years to come.
[1] The Ready to Learn grant program was on May 2, 2025.听
This blog post was updated at 9:45am on May 2, 2025 to include a link to the executive order directing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to cease federal funding for NPR and PBS.
This blog post was updated at 10:10am on May 12, 2025 to include information about the termination of the Ready to Learn Grant program.