Classroom Acoustics

When the Acoustical Society of America’s (ASA) new standards for educational classrooms were upheld on February 28, 2002, the celebration marked the end of five years of concentrated efforts. In 1997, professionals from HVAC, facilities planning, acoustical engineering and architecture industries; school audiologists; school administrators and educators; professors; and even lay people whose children struggle with hearing handicaps gathered to begin translating the research data into a workable construction blueprint. A total of 56 volunteers contributed to the final product.

Although the resulting document was written for K-12 classrooms, institutions of higher education also had input. In fact, one professor writes that, at his school, you could hardly make the students hear you — and, if they got the wrong idea or got off on the wrong track, they weren’t really learning. So, as ASA’s Standards Manager Susan Blaeser stresses, school need to sit up and pay attention to this new construction wave as well.

SP&M: What prompted these new standards? What gaps were you trying to fix?

Blaeser: It came up as a result of increased concern among educators and acousticians that the sound level in classrooms was making it hard for children to learn. And when a topic becomes popular, scientists start doing research on it, they present papers and that research generates more research.

Naturally, people started to say there really should be a standard. This is typical because standards usually follow research. Experts in a given field try to gather the knowledge they have in the literature and best practices and bring it down to something people can employ in many circumstances. We all use standards, but we may not know it. When you buy a can of oil weighted W40, it’s graded according to a standard. Film is rated as ASA 400.

SP&M: So this is a new document, not a revision?

Blaeser: This is the first standards specifically for classroom acoustics, although the levels recommended have been around for many years. Actually, we went back in books written in the ’50s, so this is not new knowledge. But, the problem is, we’ve become more modern. In older times, schools were inherently quieter. There was less noise from air conditioning and heating systems, less traffic going by and there were fewer planes overhead.

Nor is it exclusive. The limits and levels we recommend are the same as those the World Health Organization recommends.

SP&M: Studies you cite show a difference between children’s hearing and adults’. Does that impact decisions when following the guidelines?

Blaeser: Actually, there is a discussion of reverberation control for larger classrooms in the standards, but it’s an annex. We have people working on that aspect.

But the need to be able to hear to learn is the core of most learning. A room with an echo makes it hard to listen if you’re age four or 40. Have you ever gone to a meeting in a hotel where the air conditioner is so loud nobody can hear the speaker? If that’s going on in your classroom, your students are being short changed of their opportunity to learn.

Young children can miss as much as one word in every four. That means 25 percent of what the teacher says goes right out the window. And we’re talking in terms of normal hearing children, not kids with a stuffy ear from a head cold. Now, adults do learn to fill in a certain amount — if you didn’t hear every word, you figure out what’s said from the context. Surely students fall into that category but, if they’re taking something that’s new and challenging, they may not have the context.

You’re spending the money for the design of the building in the first place, so take the extra step to ensure the rooms don’t have an echo.

SP&M: Can manufacturers deliver these standards today?

Blaeser: It’s not a problem. All the materials are available — the acoustical ceiling tiles, paneling and other materials. Certainly, if there’s a demand for this, then there will be even more materials available.

If you are interested in a copy of the standards, the price is $35 at the Standards Store link: .

Featured

  • UCNJ Launches $30M Modernization of Physical Education Center

    The Union College of Union County (UCNJ) in Cranford, N.J., recently broke ground on a new $30-million modernization project for its Physical Education Center (PECK), according to a news release. The college partnered with DIGroup Architecture for the project’s design, transitioning the existing 42,000-square-foot structure into a campus hub for student athletics and campus life.

  • South Texas K–12 District Debuts Region’s First Electric Bus Fleet

    The Valley View Independent School District in Pharr, Texas, recently announced a partnership with Highland Electric Fleets to launch the district’s—and the region’s—first fleet of all-electric school buses, according to a news release.

  • Texas K–12 District to Build New Elementary, High Schools

    The High Island Independent School District on the Bolivar Peninsula in Southeast Texas recently announced that construction on a new elementary school and a new high school will begin in January 2026, according to local news. Funding will come from a $27.9-million bond passed in May 2025.

  • Texas District Finishes Construction on New Middle School, Admin Building

    The Westwood Independent School District recently held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Westwood Middle School and Administration Building in Palestine, Texas, according to a news release. The campus covers 106,000 square feet and has the capacity for 650 students in grades 6–8, and it will also play home to the district’s staff and administration.

Digital Edition