Sound

Cynthia R. Newman              Washington Elementary
2045 E. 93rd St.               3611 E. 114th St.
Chicago IL 60617               Chicago IL 60617
                               312-535-5010

Objectives:

After this lesson, the student should be able to

     1.  relate the pitch of sound to the length of a vibrating object.

     2.  define words (pitch, source, medium, detector, air conduction, and 
         bone conduction).

     3.  examine hearing acuity using the tuning fork by means of air 
         conduction and bone conduction.

     4.  discuss how Europe contributed to earlier conventions.

Strategies and Activities:
  
     Activity 1:  the session will begin by having the instructor define 
                  vocabulary words.

Materials Needed:  

rulers, straws, and glass bottles

    Activity 2:  (a) increase the length of ruler/straw (vibrating object) to 
                     get a lower pitch.
                 (b) decrease the length of ruler/straw (vibrating object) to 
                     get a higher pitch.
                 (c) record the observation made.

    Activity 3:  (a) fill one bottle with water almost to the top and fill 
                     another bottle half full.
                 (b) blow across each bottle and listen to he highness/lowness 
                     of pitch of each bottle.
                 (c) tap each bottle and listen to the highness/lowness of pitch 
                     of each bottle.
                 (d) record the observations made.

    Activity 4:  (a) each group will take eight pop bottles.
                 (b) each group will fill the bottles with the appropriate 
                     amount of water needed to produce an octave.
                 (c) each group will produce the piano scale by blowing across
                     the bottles.
                 (d) record the observations made.

Performance Assessment: 

Why was the pitch lower for the bottle with less water when you blew across the 
top of the bottle?  Why was the pitch higher when you tapped the bottle with 
less water? 
                                     
Rubric:
              3 Answer provided clear explanation 
                Applied principles learned in class
                Used previous example in class to support answer
              2 Explanation was somewhat unclear
              1 Little or no explanation
              0 No attempt made to answer questions

Conclusions:   

If the vibrating column is shorter, the pitch will be higher and vice versa.   

Materials Needed:  

tuning forks, stop watches, and rubber sticks
                                                                          
    Activity 5:  (1) students will compare time in seconds for air conduction 
                     and bone conduction to examine hearing acuity using the 
                     tuning fork.
                 (2) they will work in groups of four (examiner, timer, 
                     recorder and subject).
                 (3) the examiner will tap a tuning fork with a rubber stick.
                 (4) then, the examiner will place the tuning fork on the bone
                     protruding behind the right ear (mastoid process) for 3 
                     trials on the subject.
                 (5) simultaneously, the timer will time how long any sound was
                     heard (even the faintest sound that was heard using the 
                     tuning fork) during each trial.
                     (the timer will start the stopwatch as soon as the tuning 
                     fork is tapped).
                 (6) the recorder will record the time in seconds.
                 (7) the subject will hold his/her hand up as long as he/she 
                     hears the sound.
                 (8) afterwards, the examiner will follow the same procedure
                     for the left ear.
                 (9) next, the examiner will place the tuning fork at the 
                     midline of the forehead above the level of the eyebrow for 
                     3 trials on the subject.

Conclusions: 

The time that the sound was heard occurred longer for air conduction than bone 
conduction.  Greater energy was required for sound to travel for bone conduction 
than air conduction.
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