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Click! Clack! Bang! Z00m! Ring! Whoosh! Swish! Broom! Sound Energy Unit plan Pamela Ledbetter, Odette Larroche -Garcia & Julia Springer Educat ion 713.22. Table of Contents. MST Inquiry Model: Holistic Web Lesson 1: History Sets The “Sound” Scene
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Click! Clack! Bang! Z00m! Ring! Whoosh! Swish! Broom! Sound Energy Unit plan Pamela Ledbetter, Odette Larroche-Garcia & Julia Springer Education 713.22
Table of Contents • MST Inquiry Model: Holistic Web • Lesson 1: History Sets The “Sound” Scene Alexander Graham Bell: The First Telephone • Lesson 2: Feel the Vibration! What is Sound? How Do We Measure Sound? • Lesson 3: Shhh! Did you hear that? How we hear: How does the ear help us hear? What’s that Noise? • Lesson 4: Dance to the Music Making Music with Instruments • Lesson 5: Experimenting with Sound Scavenger Hunt Creating Sound: What Can You Do With Sound? • Lesson 6: Mixing Technology with Sound Filamentality Website
History Sets the Scene:The First Telephone 1875 First Sounds experimented with twangs using a technique called "harmonic telegraph“ 1875 Discovery Graham discovered sound could be heard over a wire. The sound was that of a twanging clock spring. 1876 First Voice “Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you.” experiment with the telephone. Speaking through the instrument to his assistant. 1876 Inventions Patent for telephone filed with the United States government. 1877 Incorporation Formed the Bell Telephone company. By 1880 over 60,000 phones were in the United States. 1878 International Bell demonstrates the telephone to Queen Victoria.
Feel the Vibration Soundis caused by vibration. Sound is energy that you can hear. You may a hear a dog barking or a telephone ringing. You may hear music playing or people talking. The sounds different, but they are made in the same way. All sound is made when something vibrates, or moves quickly back and forth. What sounds are these pictures making?
Shhh! Did You Hear That? Did You hear that?You hear a sound and turn your head. How did you do that? How did you hear a sound vibration in the air?
How You Hear You hear sounds with your ears. • Sound vibrations move through the air into your ears. • Moving from your outer ear to your inner ear, the vibrations cause the eardrum and the tiny bones in you r ear to vibrate. • The inner ear sends signals to the brain.
Dance to the MusicEnjoy a selectionof music with different beats and rhythms, and learn about pitch. Create instrumentsand use them to play at least three different pitches.
Experimenting with Sound • Students will be instructed to get with their partners for a sound experiment. • Materials Needed: • Metal Coat Hanger • String • Bowl of Water • Metal Spoon • Table • Children will test the sound-vibration that travels from the hanger and metal spoon to their ears while putting their fingers inside with the string attached. They will record what happens in their Science Journals and then other materials will be available to be tested like a muffin tin, a plastic spoon, etc. They will record their findings in a chart (Appendix )
FilamentalityMixing Technology with Sound • Students will be given the laptops and asked to search the Filamentality page set up for them. • In it, they will be asked to find certain sounds and answer questions based on the information on the directed sites. • http://www.kn.att.com/wired/fil/pages/listhearthete.html
Scavenger Hunt: Retrieve the following objects: Ticking clock, Ringing church bell, radio announcement, voice mail message animal sounds The following websites have sounds you can record and/ or listen to and indentify the sounds : www.nationalgeographic.com Click on kids and find their animals. Then click on sound and video tab. www.playmusic.org Learn about instruments as well as hear their sound. www.fema.gov/kids Learn about different disasters and how they sound or look . www.iloveways.com/forkid/nursery/kidsnurseryrhymes.htmListen to sounds of rhymes, animals, nature, people, etc. www.bronxzoo.comWatch videos about different animals in the zoo and hear the sounds they make.
Bibliography Joseph, Paul .(1997). Alexander Graham Bell. Minnesota: Abdo & Daughters. Bellis, Mary. (2009). The history of the telephone-Alexander Graham Bell: Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray raced to invent the telephone. The New Times Journal. Retrieved May 5, 2009 from About.com: Inventors. http://inventors.about.com/od/bstartinventors/a/telephone.htm. Cohen, Shannon. (2003). Physics of Sounds: How we hear Sounds www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/2003/4/03.04.03.xhtml. Science. (2008). Harcourt School Publishers