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04 Sound and Hearing

04 Sound and Hearing

👩‍🏫 Teacher’s Guide

Objective

Students will describe how vibrating objects create sound waves and trace sound through the ear.

Vocabulary

vibrate, sound waves, pitch, pinna, ear canal, eardrum, cochlea, interpret

Teaching Notes

  • Start with a quick demo or model to visualize the concept.
  • Pre-teach key vocabulary with gestures or sketches.
  • Prompt students to predict, observe, and explain in full sentences.
  • Check for understanding using either/or and short-answer prompts.

🧒 Student Worksheet

Concept and Helping Material

No videos found.

Definition. Vibrations produce sound waves that travel through the outer, middle, and inner ear, where signals are sent to the brain.

Helping ideas and samples:

  • Try a quick sort, draw-and-label, or compare-and-contrast.
  • Name one place you see this idea at home or at school.
  • Safety: follow teacher directions and handle materials carefully.

Vocabulary and Definition

  • — to move back and forth quickly
  • — waves of energy created by vibrations
  • — how high or low a sound is
  • — the outer ear that collects sound
  • — tube leading to the middle ear
  • — thin membrane that vibrates with sound
  • — inner ear structure that turns vibrations into signals
  • — to make sense of signals

Words to Learn

, , , , , , ,

Sentences to Fill In

1. Faster vibrations create a higher .

2. The collects sound waves.

3. The vibrates in the middle ear.

4. Signals are created in the .

5. The brain the signals as sound.

Hands-On Experiment or Activities

What You Need: simple classroom items.

What You Do: Hearing angles: blindfold a partner and approach with a ticking watch from different directions to find which angles and ears hear best.

Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?

Reflection

  • Why can you usually hear sounds in front of you better than behind you?
  • How do vibration speed and pitch relate?
Science