STAGING
Why are some sounds high and some sounds low?

Why are some sounds high and some sounds low?

Lesson narration:
Scroll for prep
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DISCUSS:

What do you think--what makes one sound LOWER and another HIGHER?

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Get a copy of this worksheet and fill in the two questions you just discussed. (You’ll answer the other questions later.)

High vs low pitch

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DISCUSS: How would you describe the differences between the high-pitched and the low-pitched sound wave?

High vs low pitch

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Circle which words you'd use to describe the high-pitched wave versus the low-pitched wave:

Worksheet spread out vs scrunched

Note: Be sure to play with the online oscilloscope we link to in the Extras!

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DISCUSS:

Which of these is the HIGHEST pitch? Explain how you know.

Oscilloscope images

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DISCUSS:

Which of these is the LOWEST pitch? Explain how you know.

Oscilloscope images

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Anchor Connection

DISCUSS:

Look at the "Wonder" column of your class See-Think-Wonder chart.

  • Have any of your questions been answered by this lesson?
  • Do you have any new questions?
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Oscilloscope Experiments

You can continue exploring sound waves with the web-browser oscilloscope on the next slide. It only works in Chrome or Firefox, which you can download for free here: download Chrome or download Firefox.

Here are 3 experiments to try with the oscilloscope:

  1. Sounds that are a mix of pitches make messy waves. Can you find a sound that makes a simple wave? (Try whistling.)
  2. What happens to the oscilloscope picture when you make a sound louder or softer?
  3. What happens when you make a sound higher or lower?
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Oscilloscope
Get ready to see sound. This oscilloscope only works in Chrome and Firefox and it requires a microphone on your computer.

When you click this button your browser will ask you permission to use the microphone.

Look at the top of your screen ☝️

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sound wave


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the way sounds travel in an up-and-down pattern
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oscilloscope


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a device that can show what sound waves look like
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pitch


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how high or how low a sound is when you hear it
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wavelength


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the distance between two points of a wave
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frequency


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a measure of how many waves go by you in a set amount of time
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experiment


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a test used to discover new information about a question
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amplitude


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the height of a wave
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volume


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how loud a sound is, measured by the height of a sound wave
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Image & Video Credits

Mystery Science respects the intellectual property rights of the owners of visual assets. We make every effort to use images and videos under appropriate licenses from the owner or by reaching out to the owner to get explicit permission. If you are the owner of a visual and believe we are using it without permission, please contact us—we will reply promptly and make things right.

Exploration
Relaxing 3 Hour Video of California Ocean Waves by MoneySavingVideos , used under CC BY
three girls laughing and walking by Mat Hayward
girl singing karaoke by Elnur
"the mosquito" by LadyofHats , used under CC BY
17400 Hz 17.4 kHz Sine Wave Sound Frequency Tone Mosquito Tone by Beeps, Chirps and Noise/EpicPuzl781
speaker system by MeemiePhoto
7 Eleven Fukushima Shinchi Town Shop by Kuha455405 , used under CC BY-SA
assembling circuit components by Robert Wydro Studio
black speaker by gualtiero boffi
girl covering her ears by Dean Drobot
hands holding cell phone by Africa Studio
students sitting in class by Rawpixel.com
girl playing flute by aboikis
man playing tuba by Ollyy
man playing flute by charles wong , used under CC BY
young boy playing tuba by jaishaunglover11
man playing guitar isolated on black background by Pressmaster
Schlieren by NASA , used under Public Domain
schlieren effects: book close by Mike Hargather
schlieren effects: audio/sound by Mike Hargather
schlieren effects: bottle rocket by Mike Hargather
ripples in a pond by IRIS EPO
visual: schlieren effects by Mike Hargather
oscilloscope by rwg42985
oscilloscope generator by Academo , used under Public Domain
Other
trombone player by Ollyy
Lesson narration:

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students discover that sound is a wave. In the activity, Making Waves, students draw the waves that different sounds make using a virtual oscilloscope, a machine that shows images of sound waves. Then they vibrate a rope to make waves that look like the ones made by the oscilloscope.
Preview activity

Exploration

30 mins

Extend this lesson

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