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Media Release | Jan. 28, 2004

UBC researcher designs the noise out of classrooms

Can everyone hear me?

Students -- even those in the back row -- will soon be able to answer yes to this question thanks to a computer software system created by a University of British Columbia acoustics expert.

Called ClassTalk, the software is the first of its kind in the world. It can assist architects, engineers and acoustical consultants to build classrooms that help students learn and save teachers from unnecessary voice strain.

“Designing the noise out of classrooms benefits both students and teachers,” says Prof. Murray Hodgson, of UBC’s Centre for Health and Environment Research (CHER), who developed the software. “Classroom noise became widely recognized as a learning barrier for children with and without hearing difficulties about 10 years ago, and it’s becoming a concern among teachers who strain their voices to be heard above the noise.”

According to acoustic specialists, children with normal hearing can miss one in four words spoken by the teacher mainly due to poor classroom design. The recommended level for classroom noise is 35 decibels, however, traditional classrooms frequently have levels ranging between 40 and 60 decibels.

Physical characteristics such as building materials, number of windows, texture of surfaces, fixtures and fittings all influence how a teacher’s voice reverberates through the room and is carried to students. In addition, teachers must be heard above the noise of heating and ventilation systems, student activity in the classroom and neighbouring classes, and outside noises such as traffic.

ClassTalk allows designers to predict and assess how the teacher’s voice can be heard in different parts of the room. Hodgson and his group are now working on an acoustical virtual reality feature that will allow users to walk through the virtual classroom while listening to the teacher talking.

“ClassTalk can be easily used during the design of schools, where there is currently little consideration for classroom acoustics,” says Clair Wakefield, president of Wakefield Acoustics in Victoria, B.C. “Also, there are many existing classrooms with poor acoustics, so this software should be an effective tool for easily modelling existing classrooms and determining the optimum acoustical treatment for retrofits.”

The U.S. and other countries have established guidelines for classroom noise limits and Canadian authorities may soon do the same, adds Hodgson, who is also director of UBC’s Acoustics and Noise Research Group.

He is working with UBC’s Industry Liaison Office to commercialize the software. He has also developed a similar system called PlantNoise, which predicts noise levels in industrial workshops. Free demonstration versions of ClassTalk are available by contacting Hodgson directly or via the Internet on www.flintbox.ca.

CHER represents researchers from more than 40 UBC departments and has been established with funding from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research to conduct innovative, world-class research aimed at primary prevention of disease related to hazards in the environment.

Note for Editors

  • Demonstrations of the software can be arranged
  • Photographs are available of the classroom acoustics on which the ClassTalk algorithm is based
  • An electronic image of ClassTalk’s graphic user interface is available

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Contact

Celine Horner
Communications
Centre for Health and Environment Research
Tel: 604.827.5622
Email: chorner@interchange.ubc.ca

Hilary Thomson
UBC Public Affairs
Tel: 604.822.2644
E-mail: hilary.thomson@ubc.ca

Prof. Murray Hodgson
School of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene
Tel: 604.822.3073
E-mail: hodgson@interchange.ubc.ca

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Last reviewed 22-Sep-2006

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