The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

QUARANTINE­D FAMILIES WATCH LOCALS MAKE MUSIC

Dunwoody sessions go online for quarantine­d families.

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

Once a week, Susan Wallace and her young daughter, Juliette, gather with other parents and children for a music class in Dunwoody. They sing, play drums and twirl around.

But on this particular day an air of seriousnes­s hung over the room.

There would be singing and drumming and twirling to come — but for a cause.

The Cumming mother and her 3-year-old daughter were volunteers for a special videotapin­g to be posted online. The Wallaces’ music class is one of the programs offered by the aptly named Atlanta-based company The Music Class, which operates in more than 1,000 locations worldwide. Many of those locations are in China, where a deadly coronaviru­s outbreak has prompted the cancellati­on of an array of activities, from celebratio­ns and conference­s to sporting events and early childhood music classes.

With millions living under quarantine, many of those activities have been relegated to online.

“I couldn’t imagine not being able to go outside and to be scared for your safety and your children’s safety,” said Wallace, whose eyes teared up as she slipped off her shoes and prepared for class. Americans are responding.

Some big companies — includ

ing the Atlanta-based Coca-Cola and UPS foundation­s, in partnershi­p with MedShare — are sending surgical masks. Some are sending money. The Music Class is sending music class.

Rob Sayer, owner and director of the company, said more than 20,000 kids take The Music Class programs at young children’s educationa­l centers in China.

He decided to set up the video camera this month at the Dunwoody location. Colleagues in China are adding introducti­ons in Mandarin, and the videos will be posted for free on WeChat,

the Chinese multipurpo­se messaging and social media app. The music classes will be available to not only students already enrolled, but other housebound families in China with access to the app.

Sayer and his daughter, Raina, worked with a staff member, Lan Lin, who is originally from China, to combine songs and dances in both English and Mandarin.

“Imagine a friend of yours being stuck in home or an apartment,” said Sayer, who was scheduled to travel to China with his daughter Raina last week to do a training. “It’s got to be terrible. Your heart reaches out to anyone confined like that, and I just thought this is something we can do.”

Officially named COVID19, it has sickened more than 75,000 people and killed more than 2,000 in China.

At least 34 people in the United States are infected with the virus, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday.

In Georgia, there are no confirmed cases, but nearly 200 residents are self-quarantine­d in their homes. All of those confined recently returned from trips to China. Georgia authoritie­s said none visited China’s Hubei province, the epicenter of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

On that recent morning in Dunwoody, 10 mothers and their preschool aged children cheerfully danced and sang songs with simple lyrics in both English and Mandarin. They squealed in delight when a lion puppet made a surprise appearance.

Wallace said she and her daughter enjoyed learning new words in Mandarin. She was also was happy to be a part of something that may bring a little joy and smiles to families many miles away.

“One of my primary goals is to teach my children to care about others,” said Wallace. “This is a small but significan­t way to do that.”

 ??  ??
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Rob Sayer, founder and CEO of The Music Class Inc., plays the trumpet for Emmett White, 2, as Emmett’s mother Lilian Hilerio looks on with pleasure.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Rob Sayer, founder and CEO of The Music Class Inc., plays the trumpet for Emmett White, 2, as Emmett’s mother Lilian Hilerio looks on with pleasure.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@ AJC.COM ?? Partnering with an early childhood education company in China, The Music Class films classes in Dunwoody and delivers them free on a WeChat channel in China, while classes in the country are canceled due to the COVID-19 outbreak and resulting quarantine.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@ AJC.COM Partnering with an early childhood education company in China, The Music Class films classes in Dunwoody and delivers them free on a WeChat channel in China, while classes in the country are canceled due to the COVID-19 outbreak and resulting quarantine.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? The Music Class provides music and movement classes for families with young children.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM The Music Class provides music and movement classes for families with young children.

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