Accessibility links

Breaking News

Beijing Music School Helps Autistic Students


Zu Wenbao, 23, plays the keyboard during a practice session with his band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)
Zu Wenbao, 23, plays the keyboard during a practice session with his band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)
Beijing Music School Helps Autistic Students
please wait

No media source currently available

0:00 0:03:55 0:00

Zu Wenbao is a 23-year-old Chinese villager with autism. He grew up in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang.

Autism is a developmental disability that makes it hard for some people to talk with others or learn social skills.

That means it can be hard for a person with autism to find a job or make friends. There are about 14 million people in China with the disorder. But it is not well known and there is not much support for people like Zu. He is nonverbal, which means he does not speak.

For Zu, the recent years of COVID-19 restrictions have been difficult.

But he is doing better now that he is learning music and spending time with other young people at a school called Chen’s Studio in Beijing.

Zu Wenbao, 23, and his mother Zhao Guorong, 59, wait for a bus on the way to the music studio of 38-year-old music teacher Chen Shensi, for a practice session with members of Zu's band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder, in Beijing, China August 21, 2022. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)
Zu Wenbao, 23, and his mother Zhao Guorong, 59, wait for a bus on the way to the music studio of 38-year-old music teacher Chen Shensi, for a practice session with members of Zu's band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder, in Beijing, China August 21, 2022. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)

Chen’s Studio started offering music lessons for people with autism when the pandemic started.

Zu’s mother, Zhao Guorong, brings her son to the music school every Sunday so he can study with the teacher, Chen Shensi.

It takes them two hours on three different buses to get to the classroom from their home outside of Beijing.

At the Beijing studio, Zu learned how to play the keyboards and sing in a band called “Star Kids.”

"Without music, without these lessons, he wouldn't have anything," Zhao said. The children he grew up with, she said, all have jobs or go to school. She said her son would not have any people to socialize with if it were not for the music school.

Although Zu is older than the other young people at Chen’s Studio, “they all take care of him like he’s their brother,” Zhao said.

China is making progress in teaching people about autism and offering more support for people like Zu. But experts say there are still millions of children who do not get social or educational support.

Zu Wenbao, 23, plays keyboard during a practice session with members of the band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder, at a music studio belonging to 38-year-old teacher Chen Shensi, in Beijing, China September 18, 2022. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)
Zu Wenbao, 23, plays keyboard during a practice session with members of the band Star Kids, who like him are all adults with autism spectrum disorder, at a music studio belonging to 38-year-old teacher Chen Shensi, in Beijing, China September 18, 2022. (REUTERS/Tingshu Wang)

Chen knows the young people with autism will have trouble getting jobs, so he hopes music will help them make a living. The Star Kids band has already played some concerts.

He did not know much about autism before he started teaching a bass player with the disorder in 2020. So, when China put restrictions in place in the early days of the pandemic, and Chen could not teach his regular students anymore, he offered free lessons to those with autism.

“COVID has been hard, and I wanted to do as much as I can to give them joy through music,” he said.

At the start, it was hard. Chen became frustrated when he had trouble communicating with his students. However, it eventually became easier. He said he knows it is hard for them to communicate.

But “to some degree, I think music might be their language.”

I’m Dan Friedell.

Dan Friedell adapted this story for VOA Learning English based on a report by Reuters.

____________________________________________________________

Words in This Story

disability –n. a condition that limits a person’s physical or mental abilities

keyboard –n. the part of some instruments, like a piano, that has keys that are pushed to play musical notes

band –n. a group of musicians who play together

concert –n. a public musical performance

bass –n. a stringed instrument that plays low notes

joy –n. great happiness

frustrated –adj. being upset that you cannot do or complete something

____________________________________________________________

We want to hear from you. How is the support for people with autism where you liv

We have a new comment system. Here is how it works:

  1. Write your comment in the box.
  2. Under the box, you can see four images for social media accounts. They are for Disqus, Facebook, Twitter and Google.
  3. Click on one image and a box appears. Enter the login for your social media account. Or you may create one on the Disqus system. It is the blue circle with “D” on it. It is free.

Each time you return to comment on the Learning English site, you can use your account and see your comments and replies to them. Our comment policy is here.

Forum

XS
SM
MD
LG