For Immediate Release
Office of the First Lady
April 3, 2002
Mrs. Bush's Remarks at "Ready to Learn" Event
The East Room
Welcome to the White House for the PBS Ready to Learn celebration featuring some of America's favorite PBS KIDS characters from Sesame Street, Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood and Between the Lions.
I am especially pleased to welcome Mr. Rogers. He's been a part of our family for nearly 20 years.
Today the East Room is center stage for a very important message: a child's early learning experiences have a direct impact on his or her future and on our nation's future.
We welcome special guests from PBS who will show how children's television can enhance early learning activities -- and how these programs can be a starting point for further education once the television is turned off.
For example, in Mississippi, PBS works with Head Start centers to incorporate children's television and vital language building activities into their daily lessons.
Children need hands-on pre-reading and vocabulary skill building activities, and they need to spend time reading with caring adults.
Before President Bush and I married, we had a couple of theories on raising kids. Now we have a couple of kids and no theories. But we're certain that the stories, songs, and nursery rhymes we read and repeated to our girls helped them learn vital concepts that they used later in school.
Some of the people in this room fondly remember the songs and rhymes they first learned on shows like Sesame Streetothers, like the children here today, are just beginning to learn them.
I salute PBS for creating educational programs for children, and for creating the new "Designated Reader" campaign that will encourage millions of parents and caring adults to read to young children every day. I am delighted to serve as honorary national chairman.
Now, I'm proud to introduce someone who is devoted to the education of every child in America. Ladies and Gentlemen, boys and girls, the President of the United States, my husband, George Bush.
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