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Acoustics

From The Access Board

Progress Toward A New Standard on Classroom Acoustics for Children with Disabilities

December 2001

The quality of acoustics is an important consideration in the design of classrooms. Research indicates that high levels of background noise, much of it from heating and cooling systems, adversely affect learning environments, particularly for young children, who require optimal conditions for hearing and comprehension. Poor acoustics can pose a barrier to any child with a hearing loss. At particular risk are children with mild to moderate hearing loss as well as those who have cochlear implants or who use hearing aids and assistive listening devices since these assistive technologies amplify both wanted and unwanted sound, including reverberation and background noise. Children with temporary hearing loss, who may comprise up to 15% of the school age population according to the Center for Disease control, are also significantly affected, as are children with speech impairments or learning disabilities.

For the past several years, the Board has worked with the private sector in the development of classroom acoustic standards as an alternative to rulemaking of its own. In 1999, the Board partnered with the Acoustical Society of America (ASA) and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) on the development of a new standard for acoustics in classrooms that takes into account children who are hard of hearing. ASA had previously established a special working group for this purpose. The Board helped sponsor the work of this group and expanded its membership through the addition of representatives from disability groups, school systems, designers, and government agencies. At the Boardıs urging, ASA committed to a two-year time frame for the completion of standards. The working group has now completed work on the standards, which set specific criteria for maximum background noise (35 decibels) and reverberation (0.6 to 0.7 seconds for unoccupied classrooms). These and other specifications are consistent with long-standing recommendations for good practice in acoustical design. The working group has submitted the new criteria for adoption as an ANSI standard. ANSI standards, by themselves, are voluntary, unless referenced by a code, statute, or regulation. School systems can require compliance with the new specifications in their construction documents for new schools.

The Board believes that these standards should be incorporated into the acoustical requirements of the model building codes and is working toward this goal. In November, the Board submitted a proposal to the International Code Council (ICC) for the incorporation of key provisions of the new standards into the next edition of the International Building Code (section 1210). The IBC is a cooperative effort on the part of national model code organizations to bring uniformity to building codes. Ultimately, if adopted, the classroom acoustical requirements would become mandatory as part of the building code in those states and jurisdictions that use the IBC or its member codes. As a result, the requirements would be enforced locally through the building codes. The ICC will hold hearings on proposed code changes this April in Pittsburgh.

The Board's activity on this issue was inspired by a petition from the parent of a child with a hearing loss who requested that the ADA Accessibility Guidelines be amended to include new provisions for acoustical accessibility in schools for children who are hard of hearing. Several acoustics professionals, parents of children with hearing impairments, individuals who are hard of hearing, and a consortium of organizations representing them also urged the Board to consider research and rulemaking on the acoustical performance of buildings and facilities, in particular school classrooms and related student facilities. In June of 1998 the Board published a Request for Information (RFI) to gather public input on this issue . The Board sought comment on a variety of issues in the notice and indicated that it would determine a course of action after evaluating responses to the notice. Alternatives included research, rulemaking, and technical assistance on acoustical issues. Approximately 100 comments were received in response to the RFI. The preponderance of the comments were from parents of children with hearing impairments and from professionals in acoustics and audiology. The information received was summarized in a follow-up notice published in November 1999.

For more information, contact Lois Thibault, the Board's Coordinator of Research; phone: (202) 272-5434, x132 (V), (202) 272-5449 (TTY).

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Resources on Acoustics

The ASA has prepared a helpful bulletin, "Classroom Acoustics: A Resource for Creating Environments with Desirable Listening Conditions," which provides a general overview of the problems and solutions concerning classroom acoustics. This 16-page guide, which is available from ASA, offers a supplemental resource for architects, educators, and school planners for use in new construction or renovation of existing learning spaces. Two workshops on classroom acoustics (Los Angeles, 1997 and New York City, 1999) presented by the acoustics coalition resulted in published proceedings available from the ASA (New York, NY). ASA has also developed an acoustics checklist for classroom construction.

There are a number of journals and magazines that have published research on classroom acoustics and children with disabilities:

  • The Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (AG Bell) offers a new monograph, "Classroom Acoustics: Understanding Barriers to Learning," printed in The Volta Review, vol. 101, no. 5. Further information about AG Bell can be found at www.agbell.org.
  • Also available on the AG Bell website is an article, "Classroom Acoustics," by Carl C. Crandell, Ph.D., Joseph J. Smaldino, Ph.D., and Karen Anderson, Ed.S.
  • Copies of the 6-page ASHA (Rockville, MD) position paper, 37 [Suppl. 14], includes a comprehensive bibliography.
  • The Summer 1998 issue of Educational Audiology Review contains a wealth of information on classroom acoustics issues, and includes a useful bibliography.
  • EAA (Tampa, FL) also can provide copies of "The Sound of Learning", a 4-page brief on classroom acoustics published in the October 1997 issue of The American School Board Journal.
  • Guidance for design professionals on classroom acoustics was published by the Council of Educational Facility Planners, International (CEFPI ), 'Teaching in the Dark', by John Erdreich, PhD, in Brief on Educational Facility Issues (July 1999), available on the CEFPI website.
  • Volume 13, Number Two (Second Quarter 1999) of Contact Magazine, a publication of the Cochlear Implant Club International, Inc. (Washington, DC), contains an article entitled "Modifications to Mainstream Classrooms for Children with Cochlear Implants," by architect Franklin M.V. Pepi, AIA.
  • The paper on the location of absorptive materials to control reverberation, "Optimizing Classroom Acoustics Using Computer Model Studies," by Rebecca Reich and John Bradley of the Canadian National Research Council, was published in Canadian Acoustics/Acoustique Canadienne, 26(4), 1998.

Textbooks

Acoustics, Charles M. Salter Associates, William Stout Publishers, San Francisco 1999; ISBN 0-9651144-6-5.

Acoustics and Noise Control Handbook for Architects and Builders, Leland K. Irvine and Roy L. Richards, Krieger Publishing Co., Malabar, FL.

Acoustics and Sound Systems in Schools, Frederick S. Berg, Singular Publishing Group, San Diego, 1993.

Architectural Acoustics, Madan Mehta, Jim Johnson, and Jorge Rocafort, Prentice-Hall, New York, 1998.

Classroom Acoustics, T. Finitzo-Hieber, in Auditory Disorders in School Children, Thieme-Stratton, New York (1988, second edition).

Concepts in Architectural Acoustics, M. David Egan, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1998.

Deaf Architects and Blind Acousticians? A Guide to the Principles of Sound Design, R.E. Apfel, 1998; ISBN 0-9663331-0-1.

Mechanical and Electrical Equipment for Buildings, "Acoustics," Stein, Reynolds, and McGuiness, New York, 1996.

"Acoustical Guidelines for Building Design," E. Wetherill, in Encyclopedia of Acoustics, Wiley, New York, 1997.

"Noise Control in U.S. Building Codes," Greg Tocci, in Handbook of Acoustics, Wiley & Sons.

"Room Acoustics," C. Crandell and J. Smaldino, in Assistive Devices for the Hearing-Impaired, Allyn & Baon, Needham Heights, MA, 1994.

Training

Acoustics coursework is available on-line and in presentations sponsored through the professional organizations that represent architects, interior designers, and engineers. Manufacturers of acoustical materials develop and sponsor seminars on acoustical issues and publish guides and manuals for design professionals. A curriculum and visual aids for a tutorial on classroom acoustics is being developed by the University of Kansas under the aegis of the Acoustics Coalition.

Links

  • Acoustical Society of America
  • Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
  • American Academy of Audiology
  • Classroom Acoustics
  • Classroom Acoustics Listserv
  • General Accounting Office Reports on School Facilities
  • National Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities
  • Northern Virginia Resource Center - Classroom Acoustics
  • Quiet Classrooms Noise Pollution Clearinghouse

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